DionR
Well-Known Member
Does any one know where these two cars ended up?
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The purple car (Tom's Valiant) was bought by @joes68340s. Looks like as of 2024 he still had it.
Does any one know where these two cars ended up?
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Looks like this kit does away with the stock UCA mounts. Not advocating that it is in anyway better than anything else (HDK or stock), but it does potentially give a clean sheet design.
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Here you can see a DSE front clip being grafted into a Challenger.If I was going away from torsion bars, I think I would do a generic kit from Detroit Speed or something similar. Something that isn’t using the stock UCA mounts and is engineered for handling. Remove the compromise and start from scratch.
Hammer Fab does some great looking work. I followed along as they designed that suspension kit. I'm not a fan of how much you have to cut out of the frame raits to install their kit.
There's also no evidence to prove their kit is any better at "handling" or if the geometry is reallyh any better than any of the other current A-body susension offerings.
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Completely agree on both counts. I don’t like the cut either, and no argument that it isn’t a guarantee that the geometry is actually better
I believe Hammer Fab had their car at Moparty this year. ;)
Did they run it on the AutoX?
Valid.
Do they even make a chassis for an A-Body? Bet it is 3x more costly than a front clip.
Edit - Schwartz sells one. $26,7K with 14" brakes, double adjustable shocks, full floater 9" with an aluminum center, no powder coating and no assembly. The DSE X-Gen with double adjustable shocks and no powder coating is $9.3K.
Same Schwartz chassis with their IRS is $35,5K. Yikes!
And yet no matter what you say, people still record vertically. hurrrrr durrrrrrSeriously....watch the video and tell me that the vertical image makes sense to use when recording a car on a race track.
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Here is a "bolt in" A-body kit from Heidts.
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I have yet to find a documented install of the above suspension, but here you can see the Heidts B-body version installed:
Heidts A-body rear suspenion acutally had some thought built into it in the fact that the bar angles are adjustable..
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The only other Mopar rear 4 link kit that offers any kind of suspension tuning adjust ability is the one from Unlawful Racing.
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You forgot to mention that Tom and George are both incredible drivers. So is Chad Ryker.Took that personally, did ya?
If I was going to go all in and spend a chunk of change, why would I not want something that was designed from the start to be a performance handling piece? You yourself said your kit was designed for making a motor swap easier, and handling never entered the chat beyond designing out bump steer.
On the other hand, the Chebby boys have had to deal with a truly subpar design in the Camaro and had to actually design a completely new suspension for the purpose of handing.
So why not go with a blank slate design that isn't tied to keeping the stock UCA mount? Even if the fab work is certainly much more intense.
On the other hand, if I am going to stay with something that wasn't designed for handling, why not stick with what I have? Saves me a ton of cash and avoids things like loading the frame rails in ways they weren't designed for. Plus I get an actual crossmember tying the frames together instead of a single tube. For my purposes, I think the torsion bars will do fine.
BTW, here's a fun read of a Valiant build and his success in a competitive CAM-T arena, despite being 200+ HP behind the competition
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Here's one of his event results. Note that even his co-driver beat the Camaro, so it's not just the driver.
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And would you look at that, he even beat all the modern muscle that day. But no 1LE's, GT350's or Mach1's since it was before their time so probably not a fair comparison.
Here's the Camaro they both beat that day:
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"Under the hood beats a fiery Mast Motorsports LS3-based 427ci engine that delivers 496 hp to the rear tires, as dyno’d by Westech Performance. It’s backed by a TREMEC T-56 Magnum transmission and Currie Enterprises full-floating rear axle. Carbon-fiber inner fenders from Anvil Auto help tuck massive 18x11 Forgeline wheels and sticky Falken Azenis RT615K+ 315/30ZR18 tires.
The car’s tunnel-vision inducing grip comes courtesy of a Total Cost Involved (TCI) Pro Touring IFS in the front and Torque Arm suspension in the rear. The thoroughly modernized setup uses performance-oriented geometry and extremely stiff components to help the car grip into the corners and plant the power on the way out. JRi coilovers sit at all four corners and aid in the grip-making magic."
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Hmm...maybe the Chebby kit's aren't worth the squeeze.
Wonder how Tom would have done in his Valiant with a 600hp G3/T56 setup? Oh, and bigger torsion bars. Towards the end of the build thread he was toying with upgrading from the 1.06 bars he was running, but never did. Plus, he never got bigger than the 11.75" brakes with some small 4p Wilwood calipers using an AFEngineering kit. Seems like he left some on the table.
Car got sold because his sponsor wanted a different brand:
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They were there last year and admitted their suspension developed for the A-body was for one thing, to get the car very low. They had zero claims of it being developed for performance handling.I think so.
This guy built his own chassis using all Speedway Motors G-Comp components.
I'm trying to determine if he used the regular G-Comp universal kit or the G-Comp X as a starting point. As he is using a much taller coilover that mounts to the down bar.
I love it as well. But I see a lot of important stuff mounted in single shear.I love everything about this car! Although with the rocker being 3" off the ground, I wouldn't be able to drive very far around here...
You forgot to mention that Tom and George are both incredible drivers. So is Chad Ryker.
They were there last year and admitted their suspension developed for the A-body was for one thing, to get the car very low. They had zero claims of it being developed for performance handling.