And so it goes.
Bushing installation is proving to be difficult, although I think it's peculiar to my car perhaps.
The largest threaded rod that will pass through the bushing is 7/16. Got my threaded rod, two nuts, couple of pipe caps and rigged a home made bushing installer:
Also bought a length of pipe to provide some persuasion:
Got the bushing started, and then the things took a turn for the worse. The amount of force I was putting through the threaded rod caused the rod to fail, too little tensile strength. That was exciting the first time as all the pieces went flying everywhere. Decided right then that safety glasses were probably a good idea.
I then picked up heat treated rod and grade eight nuts. The rod held, but the nut threads stripped, which is a new one to me. Ever try to drill off a grade 8 nut? So thinking I need more threaded area, I bought a coupling nut. My local fastener store was closed so I resorted to Ace hardware for the nut:
And this happened, I basically started pulling the nut through the pipe cap:
taking a close look I noticed this, the seat for the bushing is oblong, not circular. Looks like some PO used the edge of the trailing arm bushing area to jack up the car with a bottle jack. What a dipstick...
I have about an 1/8" to go and I'm stuck again. I can't access the bushing with my press as the gap between outer and inner bushings is too close. I can cut out the bushing a try to install it from the outside with the press, but I'm thinking the oblong hole will make life difficult.
Lesson for all you aspiring garage mechanics. Place jacks in areas that are meant for jacks to lift the car.