
In a message dated 9/7/16 9 49 57, owen@tadhgcooke.com writes:
I am new to Panteras having bought one one year ago and reworked it extensively
i am used to european cars and i know when a chassis twists and therefore is poor on the handling side
the pantera is the only car i ever had that will lift 2 opposite wheels off the ground if you jack it from one corner
i believe it is an extremely stiff chassis and needs no further stiffening .
the suspensions may of course need tuning for specific use but that is all in my opinion
my car at least drives like a go-cart
Well, it may be stiffer than your other European cars, but without knowing what they are, that's not saying much. 1950s British roadsters, for instance, are no standard to judge against in this department. :>)
Well, it may be stiffer than your other European cars, but without knowing what they are, that's not saying much. 1950s British roadsters, for instance, are no standard to judge against in this department. :>) The front of the Pantera is fairly rigid, but the rear is extremely flexible. Try jacking a front corner off the ground and see how well
The front of the Pantera is fairly rigid, but the rear is extremely flexible. Try jacking a front corner off the ground and see how well the doors, or the decklid open. The four-part chassis stiffening kit addresses this fundamental weakness with the piece that replaces the stock engine bay camber bar. The wide open engine bay is rather like a square cardboard box with the top and bottom open, laid on its side. Push on a corner and it just folds flat. As long as the stock bar (or equivalent to include the adjustable kind) is the only thing there, nothing will prevent this effect from happening. The Hall and Byars kit piece consists of an upper and lower bar, tied together in a parallogram manner. (I'm only talking about the top part of their kit, not the lower part). As long as the top part is affixed in all four places, it will do a tremendous job of stiffening the rear of the car. http://www.precisionproformance.com/pics/rigid4.jpg The other three parts of the kit are arguably much less important, but you can't just buy the one you want/need; you have to buy the whole kit. The front half of my kit is still in the box, gathering dust.... Mike In a message dated 9/7/16 9 49 57, owen@tadhgcooke.com writes: I am new to Panteras having bought one one year ago and reworked it extensively i am used to european cars and i know when a chassis twists and therefore is poor on the handling side the pantera is the only car i ever had that will lift 2 opposite wheels off the ground if you jack it from one corner i believe it is an extremely stiff chassis and needs no further stiffening . the suspensions may of course need tuning for specific use but that is all in my opinion my car at least drives like a go-cart the doors, or the decklid open. The four-part chassis stiffening kit addresses this fundamental weakness with the piece that replaces the stock engine bay camber bar. The wide open engine bay is rather like a square cardboard box with the top and bottom open, laid on its side. Push on a corner and it just folds flat. As long as the stock bar (or equivalent to include the adjustable kind) is the only thing there, nothing will prevent this effect from happening. The Hall and Byars kit piece consists of an upper and lower bar, tied together in a parallogram manner. (I'm only talking about the top part of their kit, not the lower part). As long as the top part is affixed in all four places, it will do a tremendous job of stiffening the rear of the car. http://www.precisionproformance.com/pics/rigid4.jpg The other three parts of the kit are arguably much less important, but you can't just buy the one you want/need; you have to buy the whole kit. The front half of my kit is still in the box, gathering dust.... Mike