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D35 SLA Locker?


Short long arm makes no sense. Is it short? Or long? Just Why?

How about you just call them facotry a-arms as that's what they are? Nothing more, so why try to make them sound cool?

It's 2 control arms--a long bottom and a short top. The bottom arm is mounted closer to the center of the vehicle and has to be longer. Some McPherson strut suspensions only have a lower control arm (Dodge Caravan, Honda Cr-v) some have a lower and upper (Toyota IFS 4wd). Old full-size Ford cars, Chevy trucks etc. had the spring on the lower control arm and old small Fords (Mustang/Falcon/Fairlane) had the spring on the upper. Old Chryslers used a torsion bar on the lower, as does Nissan 4x4s and Ford Ranger 4x4. On longer travel suspensions the lower arm is usually much longer than the upper to pull in the top of tire and sort of increase track width on an inside corner to help keep the truck from rolling over. So that's why it's noted as an SLA suspension, particularly.

We sometimes called them A-arms in the past, but more commonly upper and lower control arms.
 
Short long arm makes no sense. Is it short? Or long? Just Why?

How about you just call them facotry a-arms as that's what they are? Nothing more, so why try to make them sound cool?

Sent from my LG-H700 using Tapatalk
You must be thinking of the Dana 35 ttb. That setup uses to beams that extend from the cross member to the knuckle and uses u joints on the axle shafts. Nobody here is talking about that. This is the Dana 35 SLA or Dana super 30 SLA. The differential is bolted to the frame offset to the driver side frame rail and does not move. the driver side CV axle plugs straight from the hub to the carrier. The passenger side has an extension shaft that extends to the passenger frame rail, hence the long arm. The CV shafts goes from that extension shaft to the passenger hub. The knuckles have upper and lower A arms and ball joints. The A arms don't connect to the differential.
 

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You must be thinking of the Dana 35 ttb. That setup uses to beams that extend from the cross member to the knuckle and uses u joints on the axle shafts. Nobody here is talking about that. This is the Dana 35 SLA or Dana super 30 SLA. The differential is bolted to the frame offset to the driver side frame rail and does not move. the driver side CV axle plugs straight from the hub to the carrier. The passenger side has an extension shaft that extends to the passenger frame rail, hence the long arm. The CV shafts goes from that extension shaft to the passenger hub. The knuckles have upper and lower A arms and ball joints. The A arms don't connect to the differential.

You might have to speak up, Mike hasn't signed into this forum in over 5 years.
 
This is what I find when I go to Torsen. I also called them and apparently they have bigger fish to fry in R&D and this has been on the back burner
 

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