Hi Bryan,
I've never heard of loading the seats up for tightening the front bushes? I've always done it just at rest, no loading other than gas/oil/water, etc. Just like it would be when sitting in the garage so the rubber doesn't take a set in rotational tension.
Am I wrong on this assumption?? I've only loaded it up when setting up corner weights.
Jerry Rude
4005R
I think the idea is to have all the metalastic bushings in the neutral loaded position as it would be with a driver (minimally) on board so that they are not torsioned in either direction (either down or up). Now, this, I'm thinking would presuppose that when the driver got out, the car would rise some amount (the MG folks call it the 'bachelor lean' with used armstrongs...but that's another story), but not as much as if the bolts were torqued with just the minimal weight of the nose and front frame loading the car putting them into torsion as soon as the driver climbed on board.
Section C.4 of the manual supplement talks about when doing an alignment, the conditions for the static loading of the vehicle...I'm thinking this is what they're inferring. I'm happy to be corrected, which would make it a lot easier than lugging bags of mulch to stack in the car...
I have to make do with 3 6" long 4x4s under the xmember to set the frame height and my floor jack to load the suspension until it imperceptably moves to approximate it on its wheels (I don't have a drive-on lift..would make it so much easier since I could mount the tires and get at it from the underside while the car was up high...) so I can torque it all up.
Still to be attached is the sway bar...thinking that's easier when the car is on its wheels (or the suspension is loaded...).
As I said, I'm open to being corrected. This was so much easier when the previous body for my S2 was on a dolly in the backyard and the frame was in my garage being built up...