Jim, Here is my story: My father bought a 1958 Black Lebaron in 1961. It was our family car, and we 3 kids and parents loved it very much. It was a real head turner even in the 1960's. Anyway I was mowing the grass one nice summer evening in about 1967, and over the sound of the push mower I heard the sound (I thought) of a high-powered rifle. It was VERY loud. I stopped the mower, looked around the neighborhood and saw nothing out of the ordinary. I resumed mowing. Later when I went into the garage to put the mower, I was shocked and horrified to see our Imp. leaning severly to the left. I dont remember if it had been driven that day. We also had a '64 Imp and a '67 VW beetle. I do remember the repairman telling my dad that they "never break when the car is moving. only when sitting still" Regards, Bob >From: Jim H Fielding <bonhoffer@xxxxxxxx> >Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >Subject: Re: IML: breaking torsion bars >Date: Fri, 8 Feb 2002 21:17:18 -0500 > >Well, I sure stand corrected. I had never heard of a torsion bar >breaking. I guess it makes sense though. Any spring can break so why >not? I am kind of curious about the circumstances under which the folks >out there have seen them break. One posting references cars sitting >still for a long time. Does anybody else have a story to illustrate why >the ones that broke did so? I've personally never played with anything >older than a 64 so if its just the 50-somethings that break maybe that's >why I'm ignorant on this one. >________________________________________________________________ >GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! >Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! >Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: >http://dl.www.juno.com/get/web/. > >