Thinking out loud: aluminum parts
Moderators: The Dark Side of Will, Series8217
Thinking out loud: aluminum parts
I was reading an archived thread on OE, and it got me to thinking..... there are a LOT of aluminum parts on lots of cars nowdays. I'm sitting here with all this unsprung weight in S-10 iron calipers and iron knuckles...
Rickady88GT posted a thread about installing an aluminum cradle from an Impala in his 3.5 S* car, but I didn't find anything about him actually completing it. Does anyone know what happened with that?
Has anyone researched whether any aluminum knuckles (vette/wbody/other) might work with a fiero with a little work?
Third, is there any alternative to the lebaron/11.25" swap that uses aluminum calipers off a stock, preferrably GM car (i.e. not brembo)?
Rickady88GT posted a thread about installing an aluminum cradle from an Impala in his 3.5 S* car, but I didn't find anything about him actually completing it. Does anyone know what happened with that?
Has anyone researched whether any aluminum knuckles (vette/wbody/other) might work with a fiero with a little work?
Third, is there any alternative to the lebaron/11.25" swap that uses aluminum calipers off a stock, preferrably GM car (i.e. not brembo)?
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- Peer Mediator
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Wilwood & SSBC both make aluminum replacements for the Camaro/S10 calipers.
Modern GM cars use aluminum knuckles, but they generally have much less kingpin angle than Fieros do at the rear so aligning the car once the new knuckles were installed (assuming the geometry could be gotten right) would be difficult.
GM should have built the aluminum frame Fiero they experimented with.
Modern GM cars use aluminum knuckles, but they generally have much less kingpin angle than Fieros do at the rear so aligning the car once the new knuckles were installed (assuming the geometry could be gotten right) would be difficult.
GM should have built the aluminum frame Fiero they experimented with.
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Lol, think a little bit harder on that idea of yours Series.
There's a wilwood kit for SRT-4s or PT cruisers that goes on ebay for around $600.
http://www.wilwood.com/PDF/ds385.pdf
Bolt pattern on the hats is correct; if you could get this setup adapted to a fiero, it would cut out a decent chunk of unsprung weight on the front end. An adapter for the calipers shouldn't be hard to fab up.
Also, for the record, the Solstice and 07 Miata have aluminum spindles too.
There's a wilwood kit for SRT-4s or PT cruisers that goes on ebay for around $600.
http://www.wilwood.com/PDF/ds385.pdf
Bolt pattern on the hats is correct; if you could get this setup adapted to a fiero, it would cut out a decent chunk of unsprung weight on the front end. An adapter for the calipers shouldn't be hard to fab up.
Also, for the record, the Solstice and 07 Miata have aluminum spindles too.
Why would you eat bad ice cream?
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Here are the specs on an (84-87) front spindle

sourced from this thread
That thread also lists specs from miata spindles, front and rear.

sourced from this thread
That thread also lists specs from miata spindles, front and rear.
Last edited by cactus bastard on Sun Apr 15, 2007 1:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Why would you eat bad ice cream?
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Wilwood also makes lightweight aluminum hubs for a couple of their kits.
The mustang II brake kit for example
http://www.wilwood.com/PDF/ds415.pdf
I know there's a ton of aftermarket mustang stuff out there.
I'm sure you could source the snout/stub axle, and make up a boxed front spindle that would be very strong and light; you could put the pickup points wherever you wanted, and with the aluminum hubs, hats, calipers and lightweight discs, from the wilwood kit, you'd have a very light front end.
Or you could probably even make do with pre-manufactured mustang spindles. I know you can get them with bolt on steering arms, and different KAI angles, so I'm sure something competent could be designed to fit on a fiero.
The mustang II brake kit for example
http://www.wilwood.com/PDF/ds415.pdf
I know there's a ton of aftermarket mustang stuff out there.
I'm sure you could source the snout/stub axle, and make up a boxed front spindle that would be very strong and light; you could put the pickup points wherever you wanted, and with the aluminum hubs, hats, calipers and lightweight discs, from the wilwood kit, you'd have a very light front end.
Or you could probably even make do with pre-manufactured mustang spindles. I know you can get them with bolt on steering arms, and different KAI angles, so I'm sure something competent could be designed to fit on a fiero.
Why would you eat bad ice cream?
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http://www.streetdreamsbyross.com/alumknuckles.php
can be ordered in any drop too. but he wants at least an order of ten to make a run, the more people buy the lower the prices. I had email them about it in the past but no one else had interest on Old Europe.
can be ordered in any drop too. but he wants at least an order of ten to make a run, the more people buy the lower the prices. I had email them about it in the past but no one else had interest on Old Europe.
car.
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I wish I could those for an 88..FieroWanaBe wrote:http://www.streetdreamsbyross.com/alumknuckles.php
can be ordered in any drop too. but he wants at least an order of ten to make a run, the more people buy the lower the prices. I had email them about it in the past but no one else had interest on Old Europe.
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Might not be that far off.
I'm collecting used balljoints to cut them apart for the balls. I'm going to have an early knuckle and a late knuckle CMM'd to know the exact position of ball joints & tierod ends relative to the wheel. That will let me assess kingpin angle, etc. to see if one knuckle design would fit both chassis.
I know the steering offset on the early knuckles is huge compared to that of the '88 knuckles, but I know how I'm going to deal with that. The biggest potential difference I see is kingpin angle.
I'm collecting used balljoints to cut them apart for the balls. I'm going to have an early knuckle and a late knuckle CMM'd to know the exact position of ball joints & tierod ends relative to the wheel. That will let me assess kingpin angle, etc. to see if one knuckle design would fit both chassis.
I know the steering offset on the early knuckles is huge compared to that of the '88 knuckles, but I know how I'm going to deal with that. The biggest potential difference I see is kingpin angle.