Ok, I know what they do...
I'm referring to the type used, for example, at the inner ends of suspension arms etc; the cylindrical type which have a steel inner sleeve.
What I've never been sure off is how they allow full suspension movement - the steel sleeve is bonded to the rubber, and is usually 'pinched' tightly when the bolt is tightened up I'm assuming the sleeve cannot rotate, and therefore neither can the rubber part?
So, does the rubber absorb all the movement by twisting, or does it partly turn in the outer tube where it's fitted (surely not - the wear would be huge!)?
I've been curious about this since I restored a Triumph GT6 - and that was 25 years ago! I know you are meant to have the suspension at normal ride height before final tightening, so this suggests the rubber (or whatever is used) handles the movement by twisting.
Can anyone confirm, please?! Ta.
I'm referring to the type used, for example, at the inner ends of suspension arms etc; the cylindrical type which have a steel inner sleeve.
What I've never been sure off is how they allow full suspension movement - the steel sleeve is bonded to the rubber, and is usually 'pinched' tightly when the bolt is tightened up I'm assuming the sleeve cannot rotate, and therefore neither can the rubber part?
So, does the rubber absorb all the movement by twisting, or does it partly turn in the outer tube where it's fitted (surely not - the wear would be huge!)?
I've been curious about this since I restored a Triumph GT6 - and that was 25 years ago! I know you are meant to have the suspension at normal ride height before final tightening, so this suggests the rubber (or whatever is used) handles the movement by twisting.
Can anyone confirm, please?! Ta.
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