NOHOME said:
Not that you ask or don't have a plan, but as a socially climbing post whore I feel obliged...
That's OK, I feel like some of my activities could be construed as post-whoring too. I appreciate the suggestions.
Since I have a whole bloody backyard full of 122s, I figured scabbing in a section of x-member from an Amazon would be the most expeditious route to what I was trying to achieve. In my mind I had a hazy recollection of a 122 member sitting on a shelf in one of my sheds, already stripped of the suspension bits. And after about 5 minutes of searching, I found it.
Buried under a mountain of other Amazon parts.
Which necessitated about 10 minutes of clearing a space to move said parts to, in order to excavate said cross member. I'm pretty sure this came from The Penny Volvo, too. I'm certainly getting my money's worth out of that car, if only one piece at a time.
The 122 cross member differs a bit from the 1800 one; I knew that. The arrangement in which it attaches to the frame is different, for example.
But, the center portion looked to be the same, which is the bit that matters. And so, armed with a cut-off disc-equipped angle grinder, I sliced out a 2.5" wide segment from the 122 cross member.
Um. Wait.
Well, fudge.
So, it's not an exact match. Interestingly, though, the ribbing along the bottom bit aligns perfectly. Rather than waste the stuff I'd already cut up, I decided to make it work. After carefully aligning the two halves of the 1800 cross member on the jig, I sliced out the bottom section of the extension piece and fitted it in.
I didn't weld anything in last night; I figured I'd just spend some time thinking and planning, measuring and trimming. I decided to go with a 2.5" widening on the member after measuring the distance between the UCA mounting points on the crossmember and the frame rail width (25-7/8", if you care) on the 1800ES. The UCA's mount via a bar that bolts to the x-member, and because of the length of the bar, it needs to reside in between those frame rails. Unless major surgery (that I didn't want to attempt) were to be performed on the frame rails, that was the practical limit for widening the track.
Lined up and ready to tack in place...