My whole life I have always had foreign cars, but two years ago I decided I needed something American. So what did I get? A 1967 Ford Falcon Wagon. It now has a late 70's truck 302 and a 4 speed toploader. I won't go into the backstory of the car now because my new plan is much more interesting.
This all started just over two weeks ago when I was hanging with a couple buddies of mine talking about CAM. One of us mentioned the CAM Challenge coming up at Grissom and how much fun it would be to drive in. The only American car we had to run was my old Falcon. So naturally we dreampt up how we could build the car to "compete" but still keep it on a college kids budget.
Our plan was to put on some bigger wider wheels with sticky tires, bigger sway bars, fabricate a panhard bar, quicken up the steering, relocate the upper A-arm for the "Shelby Drop", replace the front suspension (I had new parts that came with the car) ,and if there was time maybe some new seats and a little weight reduction. Time is the limiting factor here. We decided on a goal for the car at Grissom of not last place.
Here's the parts that came with the car:
After a little benchmarking trip to our good friend Bill Wiswedel who let us take some measurements off of his Shelby mustang we hit the ground running. The next weekend starting with fabricating a panhard bar and working on the Shelby Drop (lowering the upper A-arm to correct the suspension geometry).
We started by splitting up our work. Jarrett is a great fabricator and started on the panhard bar, Ross worked on machining a drill fixture for the Shelby Drop, and I worked on taking apart the front end in preparation for the suspension relocation.
Here is the drill fixture bolted in and ready to go. All the shelby drop does is lowers the upper A-arm by 1". Supposedly it makes the car handle better for a million different reasons. Im no expert but I believe it raises the roll center and helps with the camber gain through suspension travel.
Jarrett welded up the axle mount for the panhard bar. Notice the adjustment holes? We thought we should have a long range of adjustment because we didn't have enough time to fully understand how a panhard bar worked. What we think it does is helps the axle from shifting latterly in a corner along with adjusting the load at the tires depending on the angle the bar is at.
The front suspension starting to be reassembled
The only other thing that was worked on that weekend was trying to figure out what wheels to run. My dads Civic had the same bolt pattern so we used that to baseline how to make some wider wheels fit. Our calculations showed that the widest we could fit is a 17x9 ET0. I'll keep everyone posted on if we were correct on the size or not. Its pretty wide for the stock fender up front.
That finished the first weekend of work. Unfortunately we were all out of town the next two weekend so a lot had to be done on the week nights.