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  #11  
Old 07-26-2011, 03:42 PM
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mrr1999 mrr1999 is offline
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I have a 69 Mach I. Once I finish my Camaro, I'm going with the torque arm rear. I agree - talk to Blake at Speedtech. He knows his stuff. The front will depend on the motor you are looking to run and what you are willing to cut. Not a lot of room up there.
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Last edited by mrr1999; 07-26-2011 at 03:45 PM.
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  #12  
Old 07-26-2011, 07:35 PM
jeff71 jeff71 is offline
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Kyle was interviewed on The Muscle Car podcast last week and stated they are finishing the 66 fastback test car now then should have it on the track by September with the product line to follow in the 1st quarter of 2012 and soon after that the 69-70 product will follow.
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  #13  
Old 07-26-2011, 07:47 PM
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gearheadgarage gearheadgarage is offline
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Thanks for the great info so far!
I have considered the JME kit, didn't realize I might get a front kit from Morrisson or Roadster Shop. I fear that the DSE kit, although we know it will be awesome, will be too long of a wait.

Rear wise, I will talk with Roger to get more info.
Front end wise, I am still open. The car will see moderate Autocross use (5-10 events/year) and will likely be close to daily driven. The car already has an awesome FE setuo, so I won't be swapping motors out anytime soon.....or?!?!

Keep the ideas flowing, you guys are a great wealth of knowledge!
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  #14  
Old 07-26-2011, 08:32 PM
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Matt@BOS Matt@BOS is offline
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Do you want to keep the shock towers? If you do, I'd gravitate towards a setup that still uses them. Gateway Classic Mustangs is another company that fits the bill, and I forgot about them.

I know you said it's going to be autocrossed, but how important is the performance? I'm guessing a bit less important than the level of overall comfort, given that it is going to get driven all the time. One thing to keep in mind is shock selection. If you want both performance and some comfort, you'll likely end up having to spring for a nice set of adjustable coilovers (no pun intended) because the the majority of the front kits out are geared towards racing and could potentially have a hard ride given that they use teflon/nylon lined rod ends, solid or delrin bushings. This is where Morrison and the Roadster Shop start to look appealing, to me at least. I get the feeling their front clips are designed for the drive-it, track-it, drive-it, type of owner, and they have already selected shocks for that purpose

Also, there are a couple of things I should point out about JME, since you're considering them. First, they're a small company, if they don't have a kit in stock, it could take a couple of months for them to build one. Second, their price doesn't include shocks, so add another $1000-1500.

Matt
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  #15  
Old 07-30-2011, 11:01 AM
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We have been quite successful with these components: http://www.ridetech.com/store/muscle...ures_hash=V194

Keep in mind that ALL of our StrongArm control arms AND the bolt-in 4 link components are compatible with both ShockWaves AND our new coilovers.

Here is a link to our 69 Mustang that shows more pictures and information:http://www.ridetech.com/garage/1969-mustang/

Also wanted to point out that our frontend components will allow up to an 18x10 wheel with a 275/35-18 tire on the front, and an 18x11 wheel with a 295/35-18 tire on the rear. With this combination I cannot get the car to push at all [and I drive kinda hard] I am going to install minitubs this winter and go to a 335/30-18 rear tire to give it even more rear bite.
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Last edited by bret; 07-30-2011 at 11:05 AM. Reason: added tire info
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  #16  
Old 08-05-2011, 12:03 AM
andrewmp6 andrewmp6 is offline
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If you are keeping the shock towers http://www.streetortrack.com/Street-...-pr-24491.html Or there is http://www.griggsracing.com/ his kit you shave the shock towers down to like 2 inches like the boss 429 cars had.
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