I know alot of guys used to do this, but I never really understood why. I had a low-mileage Volare in high school and besides being a total pile of s**t right off the factory line, it used to lean to one side. The way the torsion bars are set up, they do not settle/sag the same as they age. One has more leverage on it than the other (its also thicker) so eventually they will settle/sag at different rates. If you crawl underneath one you can see what I mean in how its built. The same setup was underneath the Diplomats - a cop friend of the family told a story where one of the torsion bars on his cruiser popped loose while driving...not real good.
Also the torsion bars aren't adjustable for ride height, like say a mustang II front end with coils would be. If I were you I'd look into a MII setup, or something similar (S-10, nova, camaro) with coils.
Just my 2 cents of course, even though you didn't ask
The Volare torsion bars are VERY adjustable for ride height, which is a big part of why they are a popular front end swap. All you need to lower/raise the ride height is a 3/4" socket. Each side adjusts independently, so uneven ride height is just as easily remedied.
I have owned several Mopar torsion bar cars. They ride great and are a breeze to adjust. I am sure it would be a fairly easy swap into your Dodge with some careful measuring and cutting. Lots of info on it out there...
OK, you've convinced me.
So basically, the key is to line up the centerline of the clip with the existing wheel centerline?
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