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  2. Fiberfab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiberfab

    The car was designed to use a rear end from a Ford Mustang or Mercury Cougar and to be powered by a Ford Windsor V8 engine. [48] Front suspension was from a 1950–1967 Dodge half-ton truck. It was built by Fiberfab in the mid-1970s.

  3. Devin Enterprises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devin_Enterprises

    Built to run in the sports car class that had been announced the previous year, the car was named the Hot Rod Magazine Special in honor of its sponsor. [1]: 135 Miller fabricated a custom steel tube frame that used a coil-spring front suspension from a 1956 Chevrolet and a Ford rear axle with a Halibrand quick-change differential. Springing was ...

  4. Hurst Hemi Under Glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurst_Hemi_Under_Glass

    The original 1965 car was stripped for its power train and parts in 1967 for the new Barracuda chassis/body style and no longer exists. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] While taping the June 26, 2016 episode of Jay Leno's Garage , Riggle, with Leno riding in the passenger seat, rolled a newly constructed '69 version of the Hemi Under Glass after turning sharply at ...

  5. Jaguar independent rear suspension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaguar_independent_rear...

    When first introduced, it was relatively rare for British cars to have independently sprung rear wheels, [1] most production cars of the time using live rear axles. Independent suspension systems offer the advantage of lower unsprung mass to improve roadholding, and when properly designed, the ability to maintain the roadwheels perpendicular to ...

  6. Pull-rod suspension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pull-rod_suspension

    As such, push-rod suspension systems allow for much greater high-speed stability, much lower levels of body-roll, and a much lower centre of gravity for the vehicle. [7] For pull-rod suspension systems, the only difference is the orientation of the rocker arms. In a push-rod system, the rocker arms are placed at the highest point in the assembly.

  7. Swing axle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swing_axle

    A swing axle is a simple type of independent suspension designed and patented by Edmund Rumpler in 1903 for the rear axle of rear wheel drive vehicles. This was a revolutionary invention in automotive suspension, allowing driven (powered) wheels to follow uneven road surfaces independently, thus enabling the vehicle's wheels to maintain better ...