It seems to come up a couple times a year, the debate about the rear beam being a dead axle / solid axle or being independent. I made a short video to show how free one side is from the other. In the first part of the video I disconnected one strut. I could move the disconnected side around like a foot and a half without the other side moving. Then with both sides disconnected I could move one about 6 inches without the other side moving. meaning it can articulate 6 inches and only transfer about 30 pounds of force to the other side which the spring easily overcomes. Anyway, enough rambling, here is the video:
If anyone wants to take a similar video of an aspire rear beam or any car with an 'independent' suspension that includes a sway bar please add it to this thread. I believe any independent suspension with a sway bar transfers more force than this festiva beam does.
On another note I drew out the rear end of the festiva a while back to think about where the force goes when towing a trailer and braking/accelerating/going over bumps. I found it interesting that it looked like almost no weight/force transfers through the rear axle to body mounts. Saturday with the car on the ground I took the rear axle to body bolts off one side and pulled on it. I can confirm that there is almost no weight there statically. I have a heavy custom tow hitch, tons of sound deadener and 1/4 tank of fuel and I weighed each rear tire on the car. I had 315 pounds on the drivers side and 293 pounds on the passenger side. I would guess 10 or 20 pounds is going to that mount, the rest is all going through the spring. Braking pulls on the mount, but for the rest not much weight goes to it. this would be part of the reason the rear axle stays attached even when rusted beyond belief. The second would be there is actually quite a lot of metal inside the frame rail in that spot. I took an inspection camera and put it up the frame rails and was quite surprised!
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If anyone wants to take a similar video of an aspire rear beam or any car with an 'independent' suspension that includes a sway bar please add it to this thread. I believe any independent suspension with a sway bar transfers more force than this festiva beam does.
On another note I drew out the rear end of the festiva a while back to think about where the force goes when towing a trailer and braking/accelerating/going over bumps. I found it interesting that it looked like almost no weight/force transfers through the rear axle to body mounts. Saturday with the car on the ground I took the rear axle to body bolts off one side and pulled on it. I can confirm that there is almost no weight there statically. I have a heavy custom tow hitch, tons of sound deadener and 1/4 tank of fuel and I weighed each rear tire on the car. I had 315 pounds on the drivers side and 293 pounds on the passenger side. I would guess 10 or 20 pounds is going to that mount, the rest is all going through the spring. Braking pulls on the mount, but for the rest not much weight goes to it. this would be part of the reason the rear axle stays attached even when rusted beyond belief. The second would be there is actually quite a lot of metal inside the frame rail in that spot. I took an inspection camera and put it up the frame rails and was quite surprised!
Sent from my SM-G920W8 using Tapatalk
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