They wear Ancor, 360 30 over not much lolWhat brand were they, how old are they and what sort of beast mangled them like that?
Now that's using you noddel
Will do next timeA solid mount on Drivers side and a rubber one on the Passenger side works great and never have to see a mount look like that again.
I did just that.i search on line and added 1 more to the Mancini mod just to be shure.Yikes! Destroyed those. I like the turnbuckle idea. When I mounted mine I bolted the steel pieces together with a countersunk grade 5 bolt and nut. So far so good.View attachment 1544357View attachment 1544358
Hey! Is that one of those rare Hemi shackles?The last one I didView attachment 1544407View attachment 1544413
it was...Hey! Is that one of those rare Hemi shackles?
Mike
You don't want a solid mount on the driver's side. It'll loosen the fillings in your teeth and spin nuts off random bolts. Years ago, I had one in my '67 Coronet wagon that was equipped with 440, 4-speed and 3.55 gears. I discovered those floating mounts that had the internal steel plates that locked up in high torque situations. I never had a broken mount again.Will do next time
Many people I know including myself ran them like this for years with ZERO bolts loose and ZERO vibrations. The passenger side being rubber absorbs any harmonics. These were street cars running Mid 10's to mid 9's in the quarter. I am guessing there was other issues that loosened your teeth fillings as your experience it's not the normal one...You don't want a solid mount on the driver's side. It'll loosen the fillings in your teeth and spin nuts off random bolts. Years ago, I had one in my '67 Coronet wagon that was equipped with 440, 4-speed and 3.55 gears. I discovered those floating mounts that had the internal steel plates that locked up in high torque situations. I never had a broken mount again.
I've run steel mounts, BOTH sides, in the Bee since 1979. If it adds any vibration I'm toooo dumb to notice !Many people I know including myself ran them like this for years with ZERO bolts loose and ZERO vibrations. The passenger side being rubber absorbs any harmonics. These were street cars running Mid 10's to mid 9's in the quarter. I am guessing there was other issues that loosened your teeth fillings as your experience it's not the normal one...
I don't agree with that statement. I run solid mounts on both sides of all 3 of my cars with no ill effects. I do use rubber trans mounts however.You don't want a solid mount on the driver's side. It'll loosen the fillings in your teeth and spin nuts off random bolts. Years ago, I had one in my '67 Coronet wagon that was equipped with 440, 4-speed and 3.55 gears. I discovered those floating mounts that had the internal steel plates that locked up in high torque situations. I never had a broken mount again.