69427
The Artist formerly known as Turbo84
I've been running a variety of C4 rear springs under my '69 as they're reasonably inexpensive, look stock, and fit the lightweight D36 batwing I adapted to my stock differential. I'd like to be able to "adjust" the effective spring rate, as the selection of stock springs is limited, and due to needed modifications to the spring to fit this narrowed C4 suspension, once I buy a spring I own it forever, as I'm not aware of anyone else using/needing narrowed C4 springs. With this background info, here's my ponderings and questions below.
My current spring is nice on the street, but a bit soft on the track. My next stiffer spring on hand is the base '84 spring, which is a bit stiff with the current rear weight of the car. I'd like to soften the effective spring/wheel rate of it somehow. An idea popped into my head, but there's significant issues that I don't have answers for yet. As we learned in freshman engineering, if you put two springs in series you effectively reduce the rate. With this, my first thought was an experiment to essentially put an engine valve spring between the leaf spring and the hanger bolt bottom washer/mount. This would reduce the effective rate, but a valve spring has very limited travel before coil bind, and would almost certainly bind just from the static weight of that corner of the car. I haven't searched around yet to see what valve spring rates and travel are available (and I'm not optimistic that a suitable part exists), and I haven't yet looked at McMaster-Carr to see what industrial springs are out there.
While I'm searching around to see if any spring candidates exist, I welcome correction, input and thoughts on this topic. (I thought about a bellcrank/rod system, but it just doesn't seem like it would package very easily.)
My current spring is nice on the street, but a bit soft on the track. My next stiffer spring on hand is the base '84 spring, which is a bit stiff with the current rear weight of the car. I'd like to soften the effective spring/wheel rate of it somehow. An idea popped into my head, but there's significant issues that I don't have answers for yet. As we learned in freshman engineering, if you put two springs in series you effectively reduce the rate. With this, my first thought was an experiment to essentially put an engine valve spring between the leaf spring and the hanger bolt bottom washer/mount. This would reduce the effective rate, but a valve spring has very limited travel before coil bind, and would almost certainly bind just from the static weight of that corner of the car. I haven't searched around yet to see what valve spring rates and travel are available (and I'm not optimistic that a suitable part exists), and I haven't yet looked at McMaster-Carr to see what industrial springs are out there.
While I'm searching around to see if any spring candidates exist, I welcome correction, input and thoughts on this topic. (I thought about a bellcrank/rod system, but it just doesn't seem like it would package very easily.)