In our last video Sam & Nathan got the rear subframe designed, mocked up and installed in preparation for finally installing rear shock absorbers on the back of Nate's Baja Bug. As mentioned previously, the father & son team didn't want to cut into the body to run a rear shock absorber, which is the most common method of running a rear shock when installing 3x3 rear trailing arms. So, with the arms in place, the subframe installed, and a stock replacement Bilstein shock in hand, Sam & Nate began testing mounting locations and cycling the rear suspension. Oddly enough, the location they ended up with utilized the stock shock tower, not the subframe. Watch and enjoy the pair working to finally get the rear shocks installed!
Video Transcript
Hi guys, I'm Sam. And I'm Nate. And we will... we will shock you! Well, not you. We're going to try to put shocks on the back of this Baja Bug, finally.
Step one, done. Step two? Going to be a little bit more work. Think I figured out the decentāyeah, yeah. It looks like the '67 seats. I definitely like the '67 color. So I got that trimmed back down, yay!
So now we sit closer to our body. We can also come in and grind it down to get a little bit more taper on that. If you werenāt afraid of the grinder, Iād say do that. But youāre afraid of the grinder.
I mean, I could put long sleeves on. Well, if you wanted to grind that, you could do that. Itās up to you though. Yeah, Iāll go put some long sleeves, put some pants and socks and shoes on too. All right, boots! Doc boots!
What Iām trying to do isālet me bring you guys in a little closerāwhat Iām trying to do is maybe cut through here, and then cut straight down through here. But of course, I have the body in the way a little bit, so Iāve got to get the body up out of the way. Probably just use a block and put it in between the bucket here and whatnot to get that up and over. So let me do that real quick.
Well, unfortunately, right now what weāve got a problem with is this guy here hooking onto that. So Iām going to come back in here and cut this little ear out of the way so I can lift the body up some more to come in here and then chop this down right here and right there. That will be a ledge for this tube to sit on, and that will be our new shock tower. Right about there. Sound good? I hope so, because thatās what weāre going to try.
Did you already cut it down? Nope. Iāve got to try to cut the body up.
Somebodyās actually using the grinder! Yeah, for once. For once! You got a long way to go, buddy. He just got to hammer into it. Look at that. Nice! Keep it going, smooth it all out.
Boom.
All right, Nathan cut that down for us. Itās not too bad. About to come in and cut that down somewhere right in that area right there. That was fun while it lasted. I guess I got all dead batteries for my Ryobi.
Old school shock tower, bye-bye. Shock tower, hello. Nate, come give me a hand, bud. Look at that, almost perfect fitment. Yeah! All right, so now weāve got to get our shock bolted on. Let me show you my shock tower. Threaded shock boss, notched to the outside diameter on the front, notched to the inside diameter on the back, welded in place, and then cut flush on the backside. Then I grinded it down. We will weld up all of this seam here, and then weāve got to shorten that out just a little bitānot a whole bunch.
Yeah, I think right now our biggest concern is getting the weather plugged on, getting it pulled over here, and then getting this tube trimmed down just a touch. Ready? Okay, hold please, weāre going to go eat dinner.
All right, homemade chili for dinner was delicious. My wife makes awesome chili from scratch.
That will go somewhere in that neighborhood, a flat tab to set it on to give us a nice footprint. And importantly, a lot of guys are thinking, āOh, you canāt weld this.ā Well, this is actually steel. This isāI donāt know if itās forged or cast steelābut either way, it is steel. You can weld to it. It is plenty strong. Youāll see thatāor youāll hear thatāwhen Iām going through and welding.
I got it tacked right there, shoe tacked in place, and apparently the tube tacked in place a little bit as well. Thatās good there. Kind of have to wing this one, because I canāt see with the shock in the way. But the shock obviously needs to be in place right about there.
Letās pump her up, Nate. At this point, this shock needs to go back further that way. Same thing up here, but this will give us a good ballpark. Letās measure travel. Oh, wow, yeah, looks good, huh? So to the bottom of our eyelet, currently 14 inches to the bottom of our eyelet. Nate, you want to do the honors and jack this thing up? Hopefully, this shock tower doesnāt move too much. Oh, you know what? I could have gone a lot further forward with that. You still might. Actually, you know what? Iām going to do that right now.
Okay, Iāll continue. Ready? Hold. Donāt go too far. Just going to take a second. Grab me the hammer real quick.
That looks a little bit better. Grab the stinger. Keep going up. Got it measured. Itās still going. Gosh. Is that it? Nope. All right, drop that back down. All right, bring it up. So, 28 and a quarter. Wow, look at that. Thatās only 10 inchesāno, 14. Oh, shoot, 28! Never mind, not 14 to 24. Iām freaking out. It was 14 and a half inches. That aināt bad at all.
So, 28.25. What we got in the front was 14. Nathan, how much shock travel do we have?
Fourteen and a quarter inches. Nice! Thatās pretty good. Not bad. Itās all under the carānot all under the carāin the car. Stock shock absorber, stock Bilstein replacement shock absorber. Let her drop. Let drop. Let drop! Or push it down. Take a second. It was tested in the Nordschleife, which is in Germany. Yeah, the NĆ¼rburgring Nordschleife. Itās not even stiff, which I was super scared about. I was scared that it was going to be like the original front. Yeah, itās got some resistance, but itās not as bad as the front was originally. Thatās much better.
Nathan, we have a technique that works for shocks. Yeah, buddy! Inside or under? Outside and under! Yeah, buddy! Itās inside the stock fender well. Has anybody done this before? Probably not. Is that going to stop us from doing it? No.
What do we do to mount it? Well, we use our upper spring plate bolt. Iāll end up double-shearing that. Iāll run another plate out here, box this into the trailing arm to hold both sides of the shock. But there we go. We have a shock tower underneath the fender well and still have 14 inches of travel. Not bad, not bad at all. All right, Iām going to get to doing some welding here.
We got the shock in place. Hopefullyāthis is why weāre going to have the other support come in. Letās try the quick-up test.
Pull it all the way up. Iām going to get it up off the jack completelyāoff the stand completely. There we go. It is freestanding on that tube. And it bent up against the body. So, extreme bottoming outāthatās why we are going to put a brace in between here and here. But obviously, we need to be clear of the body. Weāll brace that and weld a bracket from here to here on the backside, just to keep that tower from flexing. Itās a lot of travel, especially when you consider the frontās only seven and a half.
Yeah.
All right, dude, we got one side done. Kind of. We still got to work on the trailing arm. Trailing arm? Yeah, I got to notch the trailing arm back, and then we got to box this section here so that we have some support on the outside here. Yeah. Does look a bit beat down. Yeah, well, thatās going to flex. Thatās why this is rubber-mounted. But if we have it captured on both sides, then itās fine. It wonāt bend the hardware. Actually, go up again, because we do need an upper suspension stop. So we were well away from that stock mount there. Even if we didnāt cut it, we were still way far away from that. So we need to get a bump in hereāa bump stop to prevent this from going up and over-compressing this shock, because that will blow out that shock super quick.
Yeah, buddy.
Nothing elseāmaybe weāll run a bump stop off the top of this right here. I think thatāll work. Nate, you ready to call it a night? No. All right, well, I guess weāre going to go work on the other side now. All right, well, now we got to make another one of these towers for that side. We got to cut that side down and whatnot and so forth.
Have they seen the orange dash? Oh, have you guys seen the orange dash? Nathan, why donāt you give them a view of the orange dash? Orange. Nathan, what color is the car going to be? Orange. Not reallyāorange dash, just a glove box. Orange glove box.
So Nathan has been busy picking out color schemes. Seat upholstery. Headliner. Carpet colors. Are you going to go oatmeal carpet? Yeah, weāre going to probably maybe custom-order some PRP seats. Mhm. Weāre going to do a tan headliner. Yeah. Brown vinyl door panels. Mhm. And then brown and tan seats. Mhm.
Whereās the other shock boss? The one thatās down here on the floor? Yeah, thatās the one. Itās down here on the floor.
Because custom suspension is what we do.
About there?
Yes. I do like my new welder.
That will do. So while that cools off, Iām going to start cutting off everything down here. Got it. And that looks literally awesome having shocks in place now.
Right now, we put that in there. We can get the longer bolts for that, and we can start setting this side up, and weāre almost done to this side.
Yeah.
Thatās why I didnāt want to just..Yeah. Would have cost another day of working.
Here we need to get the other Bilstein shock, which is there. I got that. So how come you canāt use a bodywork dolly and a hammer to get..Because you canāt get a dolly in back behind there, because thereās body. I mean, most of it would. Right here. Itās all body. Right here. For the dents up in there. Believe me, Iāve been doing this a little bit.
That saw is hot. And that bag is not.
How come Nathan isācallsāblah blah blah?
Thatās Kyle, actually. Oh. Dang! Oh, wow. Thatās Jordanās car. Kyleās buddy is Jordan, building his own 11 car. Heās going to be ready in time for the race. At the river? Looks like it. Another Desert Dreams Motorsports 1600? Very cool. Yeah, itās pretty much ready to race now. It was a bare roller last Friday. Wow. Wow. Shoot, theyāve been busy. Say, how come we canāt be that busy? Uh, because I have a regular 9-to-5 job. Andā Oh, yeah. You donāt like fabricating.
We got a shockingā Yeah, thatās a bit better.
All right, so thatāll be our platform on the bottom. That will be our cut mark there, and weāll get this guy cut back and..
Was that hole alwaysā No, it just appeared. Oh. Now we have a holy bucket! All right, thatās that. Uh, is this my helmet or your helmet? Yours. Mineās on theā Oh. Well. Wow, my butt just fell through the lid. Oh, well. A lot of things have fallen through the lid today. Mr. Bucket!
Iām just going to pick a spot, and then weāre going to stick it based on that one over there. And Iām going to stick that right there.
You donāt know what the heck happened. This.. Done! All done? All done. Letās get to do some welding. Backside over here. Iām glad! Iām glad we did. Go! Tonight you said that I think you need it.Can you grab me the impact, please?
Thatās hot. Super duper hot. Yeah, buddy. We got shocks. We got two towers! Yay! Nate, how many shocks in the back of your car? Uh, eight? No. Three? No. Two? Yeah, buddy. We got deuces on the shocks, bud. And four in total! Nathan. Yeah. We got two shocks in the back of your car, bud. Yeah. One shock, two shock, red shock, blue shock. Uh, yellow-blue shock. Yellow shock.
So, with that, we are shocked. Two shocks. Rear subframe is done enough. Obviously, I still need to brace the shock towers to the subframe. At that point, the body can come off, and we can start mocking up and getting everything else underneath here all welded up and done. We can weld in the back transmissionāor the back access cover plate. We can get the rest of the subframe all welded up. The bodyās in the way. Here we can make the brace for the shock tower. Back suspensionās almost done. And then weāve got to widen the beam. Then weāve got to widen the front beam. And thenāAC! AC. Weāve got toāyeah. Weāve got to get the condenser and a couple other things for the backside. Condenser and dryer, I think, are the big things for the back. Fewāoh, you know what? At this point, weāve got to doāwe donāt have our mount for our rear bumper anymore. So weāve got to get our rear bumper bolted back in place. Yay! And weāve got to figure out a way to mount the bumper to this subframe. See if I have some tubing couplers. If not, I might have to order some tubing couplers. I got to make certain to bring home the roll cage before this weekend so we can build our feet to make sure we can connect our roll cage into our subframe and get that done.
And thenā Front! And then we can get the whole chassis all cleaned up and painted and detailed. Well, I mean, before that we need to do an AC mock-up. Because weāre probably going to run tabs off this. Oh, yeah. Yeah. So weāre going to have to get some AC stuff and make sure that we donāt have toā Yeah. Do anything else on the chassis. Yeah. Get the floor pans in. So I need to find a super compact AC condenser that will fit above the transmission, below the body, in this general area here.
Anyway, weāre getting there. We got shocks. We got more work to do on the back. A couple steps closer to having the rear subframe and all the rear suspension done. Frontās not going to be too bad as far as widening the beam. And then the next step after that is electric power steering. A couple used junkyard components I got off eBay. One of the two isnāt working. I donāt know if itās a control module or the steering column, but I donāt know. Iāll test that out, try and diagnose that. If anybody has any tips on that, let us know in the comments below.
In the meantime, thanks for watching. Lifeās full of good people. If you canāt find one, be one. Later, guys. Boomsha!