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Sir,
I question the
use or need for a panhard bar on the rear axle of a parallel leaf sprung
chassis.
The application is
a 1925 Ford TT, a truck with a full box over a new purpose built chassis
total weighing close to 4200 lbs. The shop that built the chassis
insists the panhard bar is necessary, I suggest that the two parallel
leaf springs should be sufficient to locate the axle and that what is
needed is a rear sway bar to add some control and stabilize the chassis
down the road.
The bracket (on
chassis) failed recently and the truck handled in a very loose manner,
the repair to the panhard bar returned the truck to a better managed
ride.
It could be that over the two years on the road with the panhard bar
constantly pulling and pushing the axle the spring shackles have
loosened up giving the added looseness when the panhard bar failed. The
panhard bar is long, from chassis across to almost the opposite side on
the axle.
In closing, I would add the following to help perhaps
with your answer, the springs, when loaded are almost straight front to
rear, no arch and the leaf springs are approx 2" wide with enough leaves
to support the truck.
Thanks for whatever thoughts you have on the subject,
I drove a 1940 ford Tudor for 18 years with parallel rear leaf
suspension, the rear swaybar proved to be the one element that earned
its keep every one of those days. I didn't seem to need a Panhard bar.
Cheers, Lesseps
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