Recondition of leaf springs
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Recondition of leaf springs
I am searching for a good method to recondition the leaf springs. Do the springs need to be greased between the blades? If yes, what kind of lubricant do you use? Any good or bad experience?
Thanks
Roman
Thanks
Roman
- averagef250
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You can just take them apart, put a little grease between them and re-assemble. Not sure what you've got for spring shops in Switzerland, but I can take a set of leaf springs in to a spring shop here, they will clean them, re-arch them to factory spec and coat them with some real nasty never-rust stuff for a pretty reasonable fee.
1970 F-250 4x4 original Willock swivel frame chassis '93 5.9 Cummins/Getrag/NP205/HP60/D70
- wt4speed#2
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You really don't want to coat with a petroluim based product as the are"spring " steel and oil will take the tinsel strenght out of spring steel. I worked in a big truck frame and alignment shop ,we had our own spring shop. Most causes of front spring failure on big trucks the 5 yrs I was there , were due to the front springs being exposed to an engine oil leak . After they are subject to the oil leak you can rearch them but they really wont hold an arch long. Just my 

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I know that the spring shop where I used to work bought it by the drum and thinned it some how . and yes when it dries it is almost plastic like or an undercoat .
But yea petroleum products such as oil and grease are a no no.
If you have a noise coming from a spring you've got leaves that are nort fitting properly or a broken tie bolt, or leaf.
But yea petroleum products such as oil and grease are a no no.
If you have a noise coming from a spring you've got leaves that are nort fitting properly or a broken tie bolt, or leaf.
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re: Recondition of leaf springs
Thanks a lot for your advice.
I also made a search thru Google about this topic and found an interessting site from another Swiss who's restoring a Ford A
. He even transled his site from German to English. Unfortunately except the chapter regarding the leaf springs. He has used a product named "Slip Plate No.1" for lubrication of the leaf springs. Check out these links:
http://www.maurer-markus.ch/ford_a/index.en.html
http://www.maurer-markus.ch/ford_a/tipp ... edern.html
http://www.slipplate.com/
Roman
I also made a search thru Google about this topic and found an interessting site from another Swiss who's restoring a Ford A

http://www.maurer-markus.ch/ford_a/index.en.html
http://www.maurer-markus.ch/ford_a/tipp ... edern.html
http://www.slipplate.com/
Roman
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re: Recondition of leaf springs
I've got thin teflon sheet in between the leafs on my truck. As long as they're smooth it works great. If they're rusty and jagged it will tear up the teflon.
Thanks,
-Aaron Taylor aka...Mr. Winch
1967 F-250 HiBoy - 352ci, NP-435, Dana 24, Dana 44 & 60, 4.56's, Riding on BFG 35's
1982 KZ-1300 - 650 pounds, 120+ HP, 85 MPH Speedo
-Aaron Taylor aka...Mr. Winch

1967 F-250 HiBoy - 352ci, NP-435, Dana 24, Dana 44 & 60, 4.56's, Riding on BFG 35's
1982 KZ-1300 - 650 pounds, 120+ HP, 85 MPH Speedo