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Those welded plates where the rear shock attaches to the strut look really nice.
"...blah blah blah, we don't have winter where I live, blah blah blah..." How much does it cost to get that eyelet mount welded on? I don't need one yet, but there's no telling what could happen to my Noleen NR-4.
Quote from: fyrstormer on December 19, 2010, 07:27:08 pm"...blah blah blah, we don't have winter where I live, blah blah blah..." How much does it cost to get that eyelet mount welded on? I don't need one yet, but there's no telling what could happen to my Noleen NR-4.What I did was machine a groove for the plate, then tack the plates on using the shock as a fixture. Then pulled the shock out and welded all around. I the process, the struts shot off when the glue melted, hence the welds on the strut tubes.I am not sure I would want to do it again. I would make a replacement strut that would bolt right up. That would be somewhere in the range of $300 or so. If you notice the strut upper mount is a casting with a bored and countersunk cone. The tubes look to be high strenght alum of some alloy, but I suspect 7000 series. The lower clevis mounts look to be castings also. The entire assembly looks to be epoxy bonded. The tubes slip over a smaller diameter at the castings of about 10 mm.