So I got the rack all welded in, buttoned up, etc etc.
Went to start working on the outers and had the most sinking feeling when I realized the spindles/steering arms were never going to work with the rack. I made the terrible assumption that the tie rod would need to be on such an angle it would be well below the steering arm, except not so much, more like right in the middle of it like this...
As it sits right now my lower control arm angle is 1.5* down to the outside. Which means the tie rod needs to be the same so theres no bumpsteer. Well with these spindles with the heim slammed to the bottom of the steering arm (which it cant be there needs to be some misalignment) Im at 7.5* down. The bump steer would be utterly horrendous, like crazy bad. I wont even considering assembling it like that. So I have some options to explore. I could make a bolt on steering arm for the spindle, which I just thought of sitting here typing this, I could try to use a G body or other cars spindle if the ball joint separation is correct (doubtful), or I could go full tilt and just build a custom fabricated steering hub that uses a camaro/corvette 2wd unit bearing, aftermarket rotors, and calipers.
Theres a plus side to going fully custom. I can ditch some serious weight on the brake setup. The truck currently has a hub/rotor combo on the spindle. A unit bearing and a lightweight street/strip rotor with a removable hat like this could effectively save me some serious rotating mass. Plus I could couple that with replacing the cast iron calipers with some cheaper aluminum units for more benefit. I would be able to place the steering arm where ever I want and also build it in double shear properly for the heim. Double shear seems to never be a problem for guys with hotrod/race car stuff but the offroad roots in my just cant stand that open bolt configuration... The downside is obviously money. Steel, solidworks r&d, plasma time, machine time is all more or less free. The only tool I dont have that I would need is a ball joint taper reamer. Id be look at roughly $100 for bearings, $120 for rotors and hats, and $200-$300 for calipers...
This rabbit hole is so so deep...