Front track bar 79-85 toy 4x4
#6
As brought up on another post, remove the track bar, install large tires (35" or more) then hit the brakes hard. It will pull to the right. Hard. Now, crossover steering totally negates the need for the track bar so if you have any form of crossover, by all means get rid of the thing. If not (like me) be aware that it will pull right under hard braking.
#7
AKA the Torque Rod. Its purpose is to prevent brake and bump steer. It is in parallel with the steering drag link and prevents the axle from rolloing forward or back and causing a pull on the steering. Also helps to protect the drag link and steering arm from damage off-road. You will see more flex with it off, but if you find your steering components being pushed to the limit, they may break. You can make it a quick disconnect bar:
http://www.mindspring.com/~jayk3/toyota/torque.htm
http://www.mindspring.com/~jayk3/toyota/torque.htm
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#8
That's not a track bar. It's a torque rod. Toyota's don't come from the factory with any form of track bar. I've heard of people making custom track bars for soft, flexy leaf springs in the front. I don't feel that they are nessessary.
#9
It sounds like the same thing to me.
#11
That would be a panhard rod, those run parallel to the axle and hold the axle in place side-side.
Trac (short for traction) bars run perpendicular to the axle and generally control axle wrap and wheel hop. That is how they improve traction. The torque rod on the front axle is not so much for axle wrap control, since it does not have a triangulated axle mount like a real traction bar. Rather it is more to keep the axle from rolling under braking and when hitting bumps and having that input feed into the steering and cause the truck to steer one way or the other. I ran my '85 a few times w/o the torque rod attached and it was a little twitchy under hard braking. You could get used to it and that twitchiness would depend on how much lift and how stiff a spring was up front.
Trac (short for traction) bars run perpendicular to the axle and generally control axle wrap and wheel hop. That is how they improve traction. The torque rod on the front axle is not so much for axle wrap control, since it does not have a triangulated axle mount like a real traction bar. Rather it is more to keep the axle from rolling under braking and when hitting bumps and having that input feed into the steering and cause the truck to steer one way or the other. I ran my '85 a few times w/o the torque rod attached and it was a little twitchy under hard braking. You could get used to it and that twitchiness would depend on how much lift and how stiff a spring was up front.
#13
I got one of those rancho torque rods, Its got a heim joint on one end so i dont loose any travel and its adjustable for different amounts of lift
Last edited by deserttoy84; Oct 18, 2007 at 10:37 AM.
#14
I've heard that you can use an old shock in place of the torque rod, for the best of both. Keeps the axle where it should be during braking and allows for articulation when wheeling. Anyone done this?
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