Well...retirement is a time to do a little more of what *I* want to do right? (He said, smiling wanly...)
3291R has been a bit wiggly going over bumps..who am I kidding...some bumps caused real tank slappers...and I had sprung for a new set of shocks and springs from my supplier a while back (I have new fronts to install too, but saving that for the next round).
What a greasy, messy job under there. Decades of spooge, grit, and, as you can see, perished bushings. No wonder the back end was looser than a dancer's backside at a country western dance.
Well, tore it all down. Lots of elbow grease. Pounded out the old bushings. De-greased, sanded down, primer coat, painted the lower links. Cleaned out all the holes in the castings of corrosion (luckily all the 1/2" mounting bolts came out just fine). New polyurethane bushings (with lots of lube on assembly) installed that I had picked up from my UK supplier. New rear shocks. Reassembled bolts with anti-seize. Torqued to spec. Test ride just fine; readjusted the damping in the shocks a bit and retried. Seat of pants is that the settings, for the crappy roads in Fall River may be a hair loose...but the A road feel was just fine for my somewhat "Captain Slow-ish" driving style. Will re-torque after a few more miles after they really settle in. End result is that the only movement in the back end is stiff shock up and down and whatever side to side the tire sidewalls give.
Start to finish...6 hours wrench time total, and most of that was waiting for the paint to flash off, supply run to the store, and lunch.
Glad that's done now. On to the next Lotus repair crisis. The photos give some flavor, but I think you can see the progression from perished bits to new stuff...with a gratuitous shot of 3291R when I returned after one of the test runs.