In the spring I picked up this 65 Buick Skylark circle track racer cheap.
I'd seen it race before, hell I even raced against it in an Enduro race. It was slow, but I figured I could sort it out. And the price was cheap. It was just too cool looking not to buy. And did I say it was cheap?
The story is a couple guys built the car on a whim from an old parts car they had laying around. They had a sweet 65 Chevelle they had restored.
They raced it a couple times, did poorly, lost interest and sold it to me as "race ready".
Our versions of "race ready" differed, but it was still a killer deal. It has a full cage from a late model stock car in it. Came with 5 point harness, fire extinguisher, full gauges, and a few race rims. But the first issue I noticed is it still had drum brakes on the front. Ok if I'm restoring it, not so ok if I'm racing it. The rear end had been welded (found out later, badly) He admitted the "good race carb" had been removed and a junk carb put on. The motor ran on it, but badly. Also the springs had been cut and the car sat way too low. Too low to be legal. And I like more than 3 inches between my oil pan and the track.
So I paid for it, and dragged it home to fix it up to race. Rebuilt the carb, still didn't run good, but enough I could get it out on the track for a practice. The steering was really light and touchy. Something wasn't right. Got it home to start the real work on it. Long story short found out the timing was way off because the distributor was loose. Probably because the intake manifold had been off recently too. All the bolts for it were loose. Runs much better now!
The axle gears were replaced with a proper posi unit, and better gears. 3.08, to 3.73. Once I figured out what axle was in the car. The drive line has all been replaced. The motor is a low mile 350 from a 87 Chevy cube van, with a Turbo 400 tranny from I assume the same van. The axle the best I can figure is from an early 80's G body (Cutlass, Regal, Monte Carlo, Grand Prix)
I'm in the middle of tackling the front suspension. I've pulled it all apart and removed the cut springs. I think the right one must of came from the cube van too. It was huge! I got new springs, and I'm replacing the drums with the complete front spindles, rotors and calipers from a 2000 Sonoma. As well as the master cylinder and proportioning valve.
There is the intro to my project, now you are up to date. My problem now is caster. From what I understand, usually the top ball joint is farther back than the bottom ball joint. This gives you the feeling in your steering wheel, and what helps makes your steering wheel spin back to centre after a turn.
The less caster you have, the lighter the steering is, and it feels numb.
I figured this was my problem when I drove it. It was scary touchy, and I felt I could spin the wheel with my baby finger.
Well looking at my suspension which looks all stock, the upper ball joint is ahead of the lower ball joint. Opposite of what I expected to normally. I don't see any adjustments except for camber, which of course has the right wheel leaned over.
Any suspension gurus out there? What should I be looking for?