I have said a lot more than that.
Yeah, you did... like posting somebody else's comments about a Hellion turbo kit. To echo your earlier question, "So What?"
And Who gives a toss about an F-Body?
The only reason that I even brought that up was because the F-Body has a Torque-arm as OE, and a nationally competitive American Iron car has profited from ditching the TA for a 3-link. Just a data point, that at least shows that maybe, perhaps, the TA isn't the holy grail of suspension technology...
The benefits of the torque arm go beyond track times. Ride quality is greatly enhanced as the vertical movement of the chassis is greatly reduced.
Really... do tell... "Ride quality" is generally accepted to be the vehicles ability to isolate the chassis from road irregularities, like bumps. The major players in that department are damping, spring rate, and bushing compliance (isolation). Why do you think Ford went with that god-awful hydro bushing on the front LCA? Because it was cheaper? Hardly. Vertical chassis movement on hard acceleration does factor in A/S%, and yes, the torque arm MAY have a higher A/S%, but that is still largely a function of the rear LCA mount locations. In other conditions, vertical chassis movement is strictly a function of wheel rate, which includes spring rate and bushing compliance. IF ALL THINGS REMAIN THE SAME excepting the swap from a 3rd link to a Torque-arm, wheel rate will not change, and thus neither will vertical chassis movement.
My reality is different from your reality.
Obviously.
I have the torque arm watts link package. You do not. I have driven the setup you advocate.
I will grant you that. I do not personally own a T/A plus Watts car. So you're saying that you've driven a COMPLETELY Heim-equipped S197? No rubber diff bushing, no poly, rubber or Delrin in any of the three rear arms or the Panhard bar?
You have apparently not driven the setup I advocate. That puts you at a disadvantage and reliant upon making nonsensical comparisons about a piece you have no personal experience with.
You are correct in that I have NOT driven a T/A plus Watts S197. I HAVE driven Watts cars, and I HAVE driven T/A cars, so I feel that I do have a leg to stand on.
I am one of many that believe this is a superior rear end set up to the traditional three link. I am in good company with Griggs and Cortex and feel very comfortable with their experience over anybody on this forum. All I ever did was give my personal experience which was at first ridiculed, then violently opposed and now is in the process of being accepted as self evident. That does not win me a popularity contest but I could care less. The truth is the truth.
Okay... First, your "personal experience" was given only in terms of platitudes and hyperbole, and it has since become obvious that you have little, if any, understanding of the theory behind suspension operation. You weren't ridiculed and/or violently opposed for your opinion, it was because you presented it in such a fashion that flies in the face of everything we KNOW (not guess or assume) about suspension operation. Your claim earlier in your post about the TA reducing suspension motion is a case in point. Then, when you were called on the (essentially) outlandish claims you made, you got exceedingly defensive, as if you couldn't BELIEVE that we unwashed masses would dare to refute your "bitchin" descriptions as gospel.
Here's what I think actually happened... You bought a stock Mustang, and drove it like an ass-hat. You assumed that your skill as a driver was self-evident (like Rain-Man's "I'm an excellent driver" schtick), so you threw a pile of parts at the car. You changed the PHB out for a Watts, you changed the 3rd link out for a TA, and while you were at it changed dampers, springs, relocated suspension mounting points, changed the lower control arm bushing material, etc. You were then incredibly pleased with the results, and proclaimed it "bitchin." I'm actually pleased for you, no sarcasm. It sounds like you have a nicely put together rear suspension. What you can't comment on, however, is how any one of these pieces IN ISOLATION has affected the behavior of the entire package. Your comment about ride quality points at dampers and springs. Your comment about vertical chassis movement points at springs and/or LCA relocation. You haven't offered any metric for pre/post comparison at all, while insisting that your opinion is the only one that is valid, or "true," and generally acting like a messiah that is being refuted. THAT is what we're all taking exception to.
In the end, a torque arm does EXACTLY the same job as a 3rd link, albeit in a completely different way. I will grant that the Watts is probably a superior solution for lateral location, but I will still argue that it truly shines in certain situations, and less effective in others, where the cost/benefit may not be so clear cut. Are they night and day different from a stock 3-link/PHB? You bet they are. Compared to a completely Heim-equipped car, though, I think no so night and day. When you start tightening down the suspension setups, moving more towards "race" and further from "street," the differences just might be vanishingly small.