has anyone heard of tapering your leaf springs? in other words the measurment from the left spring to the right on the front is further apart than the rear......42 1/2" on the front and 40 1/4" on the rear....springs are 60" long
this was stock gm hangers and 88-up springs.

Not really wanting to get into this all that much since I can't imagine ever doing it, but if the spring perches were welded onto the axle tubes at an angle and the spring plates were made a lot wider, wouldn't they clamp OK?If the leaf springs aren't parallel to each other it will be impossible to have the u-bolt clamp the axle to the spring since the axle housing would not be perpendicular to the leaf springs.![]()
The new toyota tundras do that from the factory. I forget why but they had a good reason.
I seen that too..I think it was on early camaro's, the front of the springs are closer though, this is a debate over why though...after engineering the chassis they wanted to run a bigger fuel tank so the pushed the back of the springs out, this is said to result in a tighter feel not sure if they would have done it if they designed the chassis with the bigger tank in the first place.I have an article on leaf spring suspensions that I saved from somewhere. It says having the front of the springs closer together will make a suspension feel tighter to the driver.
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gunna check that on my 94 right nowGo measure the rear spring mounts on an '88-98 Chevy
I don't remember exactly how much but they are different by 4-5"
Go measure the rear spring mounts on an '88-98 Chevy
I don't remember exactly how much but they are different by 4-5"
Seriously? THats crazy! Like we are talking about here? The front spring mount to mount width is different from the rears by 4-5"?
gunna check that on my 94 right now