Adapting FWD uprights to RWD
Adapting FWD uprights to RWD
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Discussion

annodomini2

Original Poster:

6,966 posts

277 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
quotequote all
Maybe this question has been asked before, but when people perform RWD conversions on FWD cars, how are the front uprights adapted for no longer having the driveshaft's through them?

Richard-D

2,078 posts

90 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
quotequote all
Just remove the driveshaft from the outer joint inwards and leave the outer section in the hub. Nothing else required. Have a look at the front of an MGF/TF to see the same on a production car.

GreenV8S

31,003 posts

310 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
quotequote all
annodomini2 said:
Maybe this question has been asked before, but when people perform RWD conversions on FWD cars, how are the front uprights adapted for no longer having the driveshaft's through them?
By unbolting and removing the driveshafts, I suppose. Why would it need more than that?

njw1

2,702 posts

137 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
quotequote all
^^^ RWD Transits are the same.

E-bmw

12,673 posts

178 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
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Another vote for simples!

stevieturbo

18,016 posts

273 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
quotequote all
Every setup is different, but it should only take about 60 seconds looking at it to see what needs done.

Some, most may require the CV/stub to remain in place if it holts the bearing setup/flange together.

annodomini2

Original Poster:

6,966 posts

277 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
quotequote all
stevieturbo said:
Every setup is different, but it should only take about 60 seconds looking at it to see what needs done.

Some, most may require the CV/stub to remain in place if it holts the bearing setup/flange together.
This is what I would have thought, given most hubs are press fit, I wouldn't want to be relying purely on friction to keep the hub in the bearing.