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let's talk chassis bracing


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yea, it's been said that a strut tower brace on the front will drastically help with chassis flex, and therefore handling. I also have a pair of aluminum fender braces for an impreza that I intend to use on my wagon (when I get motivated enough to pull my fenders......don't hold your breath :lol: )

 

 

but I've been thinking about the rear. many wagon owners talk about how much a rear strut tower brace helps, and I've been looking at my car, trying to decide how best to do this....empty-handed of course.

 

my only success was finding cool pictures of some custom braces....like this for a GC impreza, that still allows the use of the rear seat:

x-brace1small.jpg

 

 

then it occured to me.....the rear suspension is already very well tied together due to the trailing arm design. I don't think that turning forces really exert much force on the rear of the body (between the 2 sides anyway, I'm sure a full roll cage to tie the front to rear would help....but that's a whole different can of worms).

 

 

 

am I making sense? thoughts?

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a brace between the rear will do wonders also.granted the rigidity of a wagon is pretty good,but think of the body roll factor.does that make sense?i guess what i mean is if you put a brace in the rear and ran it straight across it would make it possible to tie into .you could just build a cage much like the one in the photo right behind the seat non -intrusively and have it extend rearward to the strut top area.then you achieve front to back and left to right.this limits your fold down seat option for space , but if your gonna do it there is going to be concessions anyway.

cheers, brian

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Because the rear suspension on the EA cars is not an actual Macpherson strut setup...

Just to be a smartalec :grin: , none of the Subarus I have seen use an actual Macpherson Strut anywheres. True Macpherson Strut (named after the developing Engineer at Ford) uses the anti-roll bar as the fore-aft locating link. I have seen it only once, and on a Mazda (Ford influenced). The fronts are modified-Macpherson Strut. Rears are just semi-trailing arms with a shock-concentric coil-spring.

 

Back on topic, I like 4x4 Welder's recommendation for the fore-aft cross-brace. I know one of the improvements to the early US unibodies for racing was simple fore-aft reinforcers to keep the bodies from folding up.

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Just to be a smartalec :grin: , none of the Subarus I have seen use an actual Macpherson Strut anywheres. True Macpherson Strut (named after the developing Engineer at Ford) uses the anti-roll bar as the fore-aft locating link. I have seen it only once, and on a Mazda (Ford influenced). The fronts are modified-Macpherson Strut. Rears are just semi-trailing arms with a shock-concentric coil-spring.

 

technicality :grin:

 

 

 

yep, already working on the front, but since that design is very similar to EJ stuff, it's really not new territory.

 

and yea, I was thinking about some subframe connectors to stiffen the length of the unibody.

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