from measurements I made on my own car, I get just over 31% antisquat with a 185 lb driver oin board.
Factory ride height?
from measurements I made on my own car, I get just over 31% antisquat with a 185 lb driver oin board.
Sounds similar to the exerpt below from http://www.miracerros.com/mustang/t_suspension.htm#Rear
"If you use your car in open track or autocross competition, you'll probably want to leave the stock upper control arms alone and install only new lower control arms. The stock rubber bushings in the upper arms continue to allow the axle to articulate through its full range of motion in turns, while the new lower arms improve axle location"
I wonder if MM recommended the Roush UCA because it does have that little compliance with its bushing?
Stock springs, stock 235/50-18's on stock bullitt-style wheels, and the measurements were made shortly after I brought it home.Factory ride height?
My point was that the average driver likely benefits by leaving a little compliance in the system to absorb some of any suddenly applied loads instead of reacting hard and fast to them. Bumps or general road roughness, spastic throttle application, that sort of thing.No experience yet on the S197. I will say this though - I've never put a spherical bearing on a car that I then wished I had poly instead.
Hoping for a bit of advise guys/gals. I just ordered a set of Maximum Motorsports XD Rear LCA's and will be installing those soon. Should I also upgrade the factory UCA and mount while I'm at it?
I emailed MM and they recommended the Roush bracket/arm. Any reason as to why?
I just want something that works well with my setup and goals. My current suspension setup is as follows:
The car currently has ~430WHP and I may be going FI in the next year or so. It is mainly a spirited, weekend driver that I will take to a road coarse 2-3 times/year.
- Steeda Sport Springs
- Koni Sport Struts/Shocks
- Maximum Motorsports Panhard Rod
- Maximum Motorsports Caster/Camber Plates
- (oh, and I have a DSS 1-piece driveshaft)
Thanks in advance!
Terry, from your above statements, does this mean you do not use the Whiteline UCA?
Now, I had a conversation about this with someone not too long ago, and he asked me, can you drive the car harder with the upgraded UCA & Mount because it actually offers more grip, or is it faster because it FEELS more stable so you're comfortable driving it more aggressively?
Older thread, yes, but I wanted to post something up I just came across that I think most people are not aware of. The Boss 302S and 302R cars do not use the factory Mustang UCA, they use a modified version of the factory piece with a sphereical bearing at the body end.Want to make your Mustang rattle and clang over the smallest of bumps? Swap out to these parts above!
You know what UCA the $85,000 Boss 302-S factory race car comes with? The same rubber-bushing equipped unit that a regular Mustang GT has. Things that make you go HMMM....
I'd rather run a spherical bearing in the diff, with the stock UCA.
Better NVH isolation, and it's always best to run the bearing on the axle side.
Older thread, yes, but I wanted to post something up I just came across that I think most people are not aware of. The Boss 302S and 302R cars do not use the factory Mustang UCA, they use a modified version of the factory piece with a sphereical bearing at the body end.
![]()
http://www.fordracingparts.com/mustang/Gallery_56.asp
http://bossmustangsonline.com/index.php?PHPSESSID=4mu1al2v36ougtskntfo9dbat2&topic=3780.0
Just thought I'd pass along the info.
Well there ARE "lots of selections out there" but there is also a LOT of crap out there.It won't fit for the same reason that the 2011's wont fit. The bolt holes don't line up and I'm fairly certain the arm is longer aswell. One of the revisions on the 11+. That UCA doesn't look fancy to me. Just a heim jointed UCA. LOTTTS of selections out there.
Yeah except those sphericals wear out and changing that diff bushing is The Suck. Maybe Ford didn't want us to saw our dicks off with bushing maintenance of the 3rd degree. Ahhh they probably don't care....
Well there ARE "lots of selections out there" but there is also a LOT of crap out there.
This is one of the few UCA options for the 2011+ cars that looks well built, actually fits without massive slop, and has the proper spherical bearing to allow proper articulation of the UCA. I've tried a lot of them.
The Boss302 street car uses the same UCA as the rest of the 2011+ S197 Mustangs. I was mistaken about the Boss302-S... which uses this Multimatic spherical upper arm. It looks identical to stock unless you get right up in there and look closely at it - fooled me the first time.You've already said that the Boss uses the same ole stocker as the rest. I don't know if you are trying to say to use an aftermarket one or not. It's real easy, you want bind free articulation and if you can help it, less NVH. That puts Metco, J&M Street Extreme and Rotojoint somewhere above the heim for a dual-purpose car.
Edit- I'm with Gmitch on this as far as wanting the bind out and letting the springs do the intended work. After having felt bind, I'm not a fan.
The Boss302 street car uses the same UCA as the rest of the 2011+ S197 Mustangs. I was mistaken about the Boss302-S... which uses this Multimatic spherical upper arm. It looks identical to stock unless you get right up in there and look closely at it - fooled me the first time.
It is expensive ($690) but it looks like it actually fits. Most of the spherical arms I've seen have a lot of slop to the bolt and such. Bang bang bang...
I am also a fan of no bind. Bind is bad.