MD Ever
MeanestDad Ever
Unless you track your car there is no reason to go with an alsfb. Especially living in a rustbelt state with crappy roads. It puts a lot of stress on the sub-frame. Ive seen more then one sub-frame break at a rear mounting point around here and adding the alsfbs could speed up that process. Why take the chance.
I don't think this is true. If you have seen the gen III bushings they are made of a completely different material that is very hard when compared to the original bushings. The reason Ford used two different types was two fold. 1st, they wanted to tighten the suspension without completely sacrificing ride quality. 2nd, and most important, the gen III bushing cost significantly more money to them then the standard rubber one.
3) ...the Gen 3 bushing is directional, it has voids designed into it to allow more fore-aft motion than side-side. I believe that using four Gen 3 bushings probably allows the subframe to move around more than the two-and-two configuration Ford used.
I don't think this is true. If you have seen the gen III bushings they are made of a completely different material that is very hard when compared to the original bushings. The reason Ford used two different types was two fold. 1st, they wanted to tighten the suspension without completely sacrificing ride quality. 2nd, and most important, the gen III bushing cost significantly more money to them then the standard rubber one.