for the record I have had my own subframe drop on my 95 SLO. Well just one corner which happened before I was notified of any recall back in 2000. It was definately interesting, but nothing that I would call life threatening. the car pulled hard to one side, but with in 1 second both hands are on the wheel to compensate. I liken it to having a tire blowout at a decent speed, which I to have also experienced.
the slight deformation I see there I have seen on 3 cars with stock bushings. Those pics you have there don't show the massive deformation that pictures that Kirk has protrayed in the past. Now look at the shiney circle shaped section I've drawn arrows to in you pics. You say the car hasn't been driven with AL SFB's on it, then by that one can only say that the shiney spots are from the OEM bushings that were on the car. Cause the AL bushings wouldn't create a spot like that if the car wasn't being driven around.
I wish there was some way to measure that shiney spot, cause I'll bet money that it nearly matches up with something like this.
See a familiar ring there? Anything towards the inside of the shiney spot on the car or on the OEM bushing is 100% unsupported. you can't support metal if there is no metal there to support. Look at an OEM bushing and how it slopes into a conical shape. One would almost infer from looking at it that Ford might have indended for some deformation to occur to cup the OEM bushing. Though I can't even begin to understand the how's or why's.
No look at this, a car that had OEM bushing pulled off at ~8*k miles and a set of my AL SFB's were installed. This car was stock to that point, and look at the "deformation" that is already there. Putting a set of cup bushings in there would have left the only area making contact with the body of the car being the top nut of the SFB bolts. I doubt that the nut was designed to do all the work.
I can admit to that the possibility for the body to deform is there, but if installed properly, then the risks are no greater than the OEM design.
I'm sick of wasting time on this subject. Last time I checked, a certain SC SHO out there in the New England area had ring bushings on it, and a whole bunch of people have told me that they aren't concerned in the least about the claims of one small group of ppl about the supposed safety issues.
Again I'll reiterate, since my previous post was deleted, and for those that didn't get to see my response to Krik's remarks.
"Quoted directly as he has deleted his own posts before:" ---
I have deleted 1 thread and one thread only on this matter, because some individuals decided to Hijack the thread about ceramic coating exhaust manifolds and turned it into a "bash bruce's ring style bushings". Deny it if you'd like but I got a copy of the thread.
"I've actually talked to my machine shop about making a piece of steel milled out to fit over the mounting tabs in the rear of the SF in the frame rail" -----
yes I have spoken to them about this, but it was not because I believed that MY ring design was faulty, but I saw the inhierent issues with the way Ford attaches the subframe to the car. How many people out there have mangled thier mounting tabs in the frame rail. What I was proposing was a large flat washer to fix that as well as provide more of a way for the tabbed nut on top to further spread it's forces agains more of the unibody. Which NO bushing does now, cup, ring, or OEM.
"I've already made changes to my ring style to change them over to a cup style bushing, it ain't rocket science." ------
I have made design changes for one simple reason. I'm sick of wasting time on this matter. Because certain individuals think that cup busings are soo much better, I'll make cup bushings just so that they have to find some other thing to attack in life.
"Because your looking to make a support for the unibody and your now making the CUP style. I see that you saw your own errors and switched to the better and much safer style.
I know one thing, If I made a product and sold tons and acted like im behind what I did 100%, I would stick to my guns, evidently this is not the case." ----
I am leaving my ring style bushings on my personal vehicles, becasue I have NO concerns that they aren't safe. I've got 25k on the AL bushings that are in my Opal Frost and I'm not concerned in the least. Mark Nunnally replied in an email he sent to me when I asked him about concerns of ring bushings (which he uses BTW) and said that the way the SF is held on is the last thing he was concerned about, people should be more concerned with rear control arm ears on the hub unit.
PS. I'd like to thank all the persons that have spoken up either publicly or via PM/emails. It's funny how many of you have been dead on right about certain aspects of this whole debate and how it's been carried out.
<small>[ March 10, 2004, 03:45 PM: Message edited by: netviper ]</small>