Well a slight change of plans from the last post. We might have jumped the gun a bit saying the front end was finished!
After we completed the last post we went back and dumped the car down low with the suspension as above. We have been working on about a 4" ride height taken from the rails on the bottom either side of where the motor sits now. We tried to get it down to about 2" from the ground so as to give us a couple of inches of suspension travel at the 4" ride height. When we tried to get it down that low it bottomed out on something. We took a look underneath and saw the angle of the suspension arms.
We were pretty silly assuming it would be OK but it's all about trial and error I reckon. After thinking about what we could do to fix it the only solution was to make up some new arms. A pretty daunting task for us as we had never done anything like that before, but after we looked at some angles and drew a couple things up we figured it could be done.
We got some box section, thread bar and bushes and decided to make up a single control arm with a radius rod for lateral location. We welded on a couple pickup points to the box section we had welded in previously. We made up a bush end with thread bar on it and made up some box section to adjust it in and out of. The box would also accept the ball joint we previously installed in the Commodore stub by cutting out and welding the mount from the old to new arm.




We put in a makeshift radius rod to test our concept but were unhappy with it for a few reasons, so we canned that and went with an A-arm. We would use the new control arm and fabricate another back in a similar direction but with the same bush and adjustment at the end of it. This would allow for camber and castor adjustment.
We had to relocate the rack and sway bar that we had mounted in before. Luckily we just had to flip them up to the top of the box sections and the alignment was OK again. Only other change was to cut some sections out of the body because they ran too close and would foul under normal suspenion movements.
After we made up both sides of the suspension we put the car back down on the ground and we were good to go! It now sits about 1.5" off of the ground with no control arm angle issues. We cut out one of the guards for fun to see how much we had to take off. We removed the factory 'flare' section and stuck the guard back on, but it still needs a little more to get it to clear the guard. The inner guard/footwell also needs relieving to allow the full range of movement under full compression/lock.



As you can see the tire sits outside the line of the guard but nearly in line with the factory width when the 'flare' part was still on there.
We don't have as many photos as the last few posts as with the shed getting more and more equipped we are able to do a few jobs at a time which doesn't leave me much time for taking photos of others hard at work!