Tom, great work (as usual) on your site documenting the assembly of the 58-63 American front suspension! It will be a reference from now on for sure. It is a bit of trouble to get everything lined up when putting the lower trunnion together, but I didn't think it was that hard! No, it doesn't just bolt together with no thought like a ball joint, but not real bad! The lower arms are exactly the same as 58-61 big cars. They have different part numbers because the only way AMC sold them was with the inner bushing pressed in from the factory. you could buy just the bushings, but I guess they figured if you needed an arm you weren't going to press an old bushing out and reuse it! The big cars use a 3/8" bolt through the bushing, the American has 5/8" (IIRC) mounting bar ends. Change the bushings and the arms interchange. The upper arms can't be interchanged, and you can't use the big car trunnion even if you shortened the arms. Look closely at the spring seats on both. The American (remember everyone, we're talking 58-63 here!!) has the spring seat offset to the inside, the big car spring seat is directly centered above the trunnion. The spring seat on the American is also much closer to the pivot point. To top it all off, the horizontal pivot point for the upper arms is to the OUTSIDE of the vertical pivot point of the steering knuckle, moving the spring to the inside even further. The lower end of the spring is about centered on the tire sidewall, with maybe two inches clearance with the stock 6" wide wheels and tires (wheels might be 5.5"). Wider wheels and tires move it even closer. The ends of the upper arms are about even with the outer rim of the wheel, and the stock spring seat location is positioned so that the spring is pretty much vertical, maybe with a slight inward tilt. Moving the pivot point further out would hit the tire and mess up geometry (especially vertical location in relation to the spring). It's just not feasible! The upper arm position is about the same on the big cars and American in relation to the wheel edge, but the tall spring seat of the big cars put the edge of the spring ABOVE the tire, not BESIDE it! The trunnion itself could, however, be replaced. The cast body for the upper trunnion didn't appear until 1954 or 55 in the Nash Rambler. I don't have the 53 and 54 TSM supplements to determine which year, just the full 52 and 55 Nash TSMs. Before that there was a two piece trunnion. The srping seat was similar to the 58-61 big cars, but much shorter. It screwed onto the top of the trunnion just like the big cars. The trunnion was a "crossed tube" affair. It looks similar to two pieces of tubing crossed in the center, one on top of the other, then welded (it appears to be a casting though). The vertical piece is on the inside in relation to the horizontal piece, just like the one piece casting of the 58-63. I'm not positive the 50-53 (or 54) trunnion will fit the steering knuckle of the 58-63, but it would be easy to take two pieces of tubing and weld them in the correct positions, then make bronze bushings for the horizontal and vertical pins. Use oilite (self lubricating bronze bushing material -- graphite impregnated bronze) and you really wouldn't need a grease zerk on a smooth horizontal pin (head on one end, threaded on the other to keep it in). The upper part of the tubing would need a spring seat a little more inboard than the big car spring seat. The outside of the top of the vertical tubing could be threaded and a 58-66 big car spring seat modified to fit though. The spring seat could be welded in place, just cut a hole above the vertical pin so a deep socket could be used to remove the nut. The above may sound crazy, but Pierre Beauchamp (the Canadian performance AMC guy.. think I have the name right!) made a replacement trunnion for the 68-69 Javelin and AMX just as I described. I'm not sure it's available any more. He used a coil over shock in place of the original spring. -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AMC.html (free download available!) _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list