Dat lost jig doe.
We made this piece in 04/05 for our 2005 Mustang we built way back..
When we decided recently to go ahead and offer this piece, we could not find our original info/jig....so apparently our design guy decided to go ahead and re-make it. lol
Our "design guy" is the founder of BMR. He is about as good as they come with development and design. Form and function!
Not sure how many of these we will sell, but, it can't hurt to offer more chassis and suspension parts for this car than anyone on the planet!


Wait, wbt, are you using the flange/spot in front of the one I am??????
It's obvious in the pics where I am placing the angle finder. Due to the angle of your pics no one can discern if there is a difference especially if we are talking ~1* (your pics are horrible FWIW). This is specifically why I took the pics at the angle I did (which wasn't easy and was done with a crappy cell phone...).
The proper way to measure pinion angle with the driveshaft in the car is the method I described. I would venture to say the "tens of thousands" of customer's you have personally spoken with or interacted with are ~1* off using your method. That isn't going to make a hill of beans for the average guy but when we are talking solid mounts/rod/spherical ends it does matter.
Come on Kelly....I am just a hobby shopist, this is your specialty.
BTW - if that is a "box of parts" customer car in the pics they need to invest in better drive line mods to include an aftermarket driveshaft and an ARB (hopefully why they were there).
Keep your day job with a disclaimer in your sig.Come on Kelly....I am just a hobby shopist, this is your specialty.
Again, I will clarify in the video. If you don't want to take my word for it, I will lose no hair - or even sleep for that matter.
We were doing some things to the box 'o parts car in the parking lot yesterday, and yes - it was difficult to do what I did with the car barely high enough to fit my fat ass underneath it.
I am shooting the pinion angle video tomorrow, on our lift, with our 2011 GT. I will show people where to measure with, or without the DS in the car.
The spot with the DS in the car is where I showed above in the pic.
If you want to get technical - which hopefully you do.
How much exactly does your pinion come up under load? Who is to say yours is correct? Do you monitor it electronically?
I am all ears.
Keep your day job with a disclaimer in your sig.
"Hobbyist may shoot off mouth and be dead wrong."
I have one here without a driveshaft. I measured the driveshaft mounting surface to the same flange surface he's talking about and get no more than .5 of a degree difference, in multiple spots. Your own picture shows only a difference of .5 degrees. You split hairs over what you think is one degree and use a piece of square tubing as an extension. I bet that square tubing is oh so perfectly true. Nice job Dr Perfect lol

We've already built 3 designs/versions sir!
And, I agree....

Says tweedle dee of the pair. Nope, nothing to do with him. Just pop in whenever you decide to be an asshole for no reason. Could have just as easily said you got something different than him. He even thanked you for sharing and you went full retard again, as usual....and here comes the mouthpiece for Kelly Aiken.![]()
No problem, anytime.By your own admission the two surfaces measure different. Goddamn what a revelation! That was my point the whole time. Thanks for the confirmation in a condescending way.
Says the guy using square tubing instead of a square. Nice job.You guys are so intelligent why not take a square and compare the front of the pinion flange to the spot Kelly is incorrectly telling everyone to measure from?