The old springs I took off last month have significant wear on the bottom of the leaves, I think this is caused by the leaf below having a sharp edge, which as the leaves rub together scrapes away the bottom of the leaf above.
At the moment I have a secondhand pair on, but defo need a new pair. The question is could I strip new springs down and grind a radius on the top of each leaf. If I can why dont manufacturers do this in first place?
Ian.
Rear Springs.
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springs
This is where all leaf springs wear as a matter of course. It should take many
thousands of miles before this becomes a problem and do NOT oil the springs
either as this ruins the designed friction values.
thousands of miles before this becomes a problem and do NOT oil the springs
either as this ruins the designed friction values.
Willie
[img]http://i39.photobucket.com/albums/e197/wuzerk/mo9.jpg[/img]
[img]http://i39.photobucket.com/albums/e197/wuzerk/mo9.jpg[/img]
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Some cars had the leaves 'interleaved' (hence the expression !) with anti-wear strips (often hard rubber) and the whole lot lubricated and wound up with a protective cover. But as willie has said - this drops the internal friction - which is what provides much of the damping. You can take the spring apart - and do as you suggest - but I doubt it will make much difference to the eventual life of the springs.



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