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Sliders Question D1
Moderator: Micka
Sliders Question D1
Hi there, just wondering if you guys fitted crush bushes to the sill prior to boltig your sliders up. Or is the sill strong enough to just run the bolts through and tighten up.
Cheers
Cheers
95 Disco, 3.9l V8, 35" Coopers St's, 2" Lift, True Tracks Font & Rear. Bar & Winch, Home Made Sliders.
Re: Sliders Question D1
I used crush bushes (came with the slider kit I brought). Ill have to cut the sills if I ever want to get them out again though. Was a prick to put them in and then make sure they didn't drop into the sill. I would recommend using them though. Best safe than sorry.kitacooch wrote:Hi there, just wondering if you guys fitted crush bushes to the sill prior to boltig your sliders up. Or is the sill strong enough to just run the bolts through and tighten up.
Cheers
-Scott- wrote:Isn't it a bit early in the day to be pissed?
For horizontal bolts that fix the sliders to the sill - the bolts pass through the sill from the outside to the inside.TimRover wrote:Please explain...where do they go etc, inside the sill?? or somwhere else?Bush65 wrote:Just use pipe, diameter to suit bolt and cut to length.6.2troopy wrote:and where abouts do u buy these crushed tube?
CHEERS TIM.
Because the sill is thin wall, hollow construction, it will crush when the bolts are tightened, unless the sections of pipe are fitted.
Drill the inner and outer walls of the sill where the bolts are required. Make the holes in the outer wall large enough for the pipe to slip inside the sill. Cut the pipe so the outer end is flush with the sill when the inner end of the pipe is hard against the inner wall of the sill.
Optionally weld the pipe inside the sill - weld between the pipe and the outer wall of the sill.
Bolt the slider to the sill, fit large plate washers under the nuts on the inner side of the sill. Now the bolts can be tightened securely, without crushing the sill.
Calling these crush tubes is incorrect - they probably should be called anti-crush.
Proper crush tubes are used for applications like pre-loading taper roller bearings in some differentials, and the like. These tubes are designed to crush at a particular compression load. They remove the need for precision spacers to prevent over/under loading the bearings.
John
would be best to make the sliders to bolt around the chassis much stronger, better protction & easier to remove
what happens if you lnad real hard on the sliders that are bolted to the sills? the sills bend under the pressure rendering the sliders useless imho
makes them about as useful as alloy side steps
what happens if you lnad real hard on the sliders that are bolted to the sills? the sills bend under the pressure rendering the sliders useless imho
makes them about as useful as alloy side steps
'98 4.5L GU ST Auto - lifted, 35's, re-geared, custom rock sliders,M winchbar, some custom parts & more to come.
V8 pajero comp truck
V8 pajero comp truck
Chances are if you're going to land that hard you would bend any chassis mounted slider into the sill anyway. I've abused mine quite a bit but I don't make a habit of jumping into piles of rocks. I have plenty of situations where a wheels slid out of position and landed hard on the sill and no damage except for my head on the window frame .OGJON wrote:would be best to make the sliders to bolt around the chassis much stronger, better protction & easier to remove
what happens if you lnad real hard on the sliders that are bolted to the sills? the sills bend under the pressure rendering the sliders useless imho
makes them about as useful as alloy side steps
The above sliders are the same type as mine. They wrap around the sill rather than just bolt on one side, and the u-section with the aid of anti-crush tubes make it very difficult to distort the sill. Friggen heavy but.
-Scott- wrote:Isn't it a bit early in the day to be pissed?
stuee wrote:Chances are if you're going to land that hard you would bend any chassis mounted slider into the sill anyway. I've abused mine quite a bit but I don't make a habit of jumping into piles of rocks. I have plenty of situations where a wheels slid out of position and landed hard on the sill and no damage except for my head on the window frame .OGJON wrote:would be best to make the sliders to bolt around the chassis much stronger, better protction & easier to remove
what happens if you lnad real hard on the sliders that are bolted to the sills? the sills bend under the pressure rendering the sliders useless imho
makes them about as useful as alloy side steps
The above sliders are the same type as mine. They wrap around the sill rather than just bolt on one side, and the u-section with the aid of anti-crush tubes make it very difficult to distort the sill. Friggen heavy but.
Stuee,
do you find that you hit your legs on the sliders geting in and out of the car.
As Mine dont have the extra bit on the right hand side, of the photo of your type.
98 TDi Disco
N QLD
N QLD
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