UPDATE 15-08-16 - THIS IS STERCKEMAN ESCAPADE 400
Hi, I have an old axle made by ftf (71 Louhans France) in December 1982. The plate says axle type BT9628. 800kg. It is similar to modern AL-KO axles in that the vertical axle mounting flange bolts to a gap in the deepest part of the tapered, galvanized chassis rail effectively completing the chassis structure. Four bolts mount each flange, the lower two of which are in domed depressions that mate with corresponding dents in the chassis rail providing improved clamping location and chassis alignment. The axle tube is of circular cross section and has 4 grease nipples in total on the radius arm pivots, 2 per side (1 inboard and 1 outboard of the mounting flange each side). I anticipate that springing is by torsion bar and not rubber as in my experience rubber types have a non circular cross section axle tube to grip the rubber outer and no grease. The spring rate does not necessarily feel like rubber but I could be completely wrong. It has rusty flanges as the axle itself is not galvanized and I need to do some welding. Does anyone know the internal arrangement of the axle tube? If so then please let me know so that I don't hurt anything in there. I cannot see how the radius arms are retained axially in the tube or what locates the fixed end of the torsion bar if that's what it uses.
Can someone please enlighten me?
I have some pictures I can upload if needed once I sus this particular forum's method of doing so.
Furthermore I wonder if a more modern galvanized rubber sprung axle would retrofit straight in the slot? Are they standard with AL-KO ? I heard somewhere that ftf "became" AL-KO .
Thank you.
Hi, I have an old axle made by ftf (71 Louhans France) in December 1982. The plate says axle type BT9628. 800kg. It is similar to modern AL-KO axles in that the vertical axle mounting flange bolts to a gap in the deepest part of the tapered, galvanized chassis rail effectively completing the chassis structure. Four bolts mount each flange, the lower two of which are in domed depressions that mate with corresponding dents in the chassis rail providing improved clamping location and chassis alignment. The axle tube is of circular cross section and has 4 grease nipples in total on the radius arm pivots, 2 per side (1 inboard and 1 outboard of the mounting flange each side). I anticipate that springing is by torsion bar and not rubber as in my experience rubber types have a non circular cross section axle tube to grip the rubber outer and no grease. The spring rate does not necessarily feel like rubber but I could be completely wrong. It has rusty flanges as the axle itself is not galvanized and I need to do some welding. Does anyone know the internal arrangement of the axle tube? If so then please let me know so that I don't hurt anything in there. I cannot see how the radius arms are retained axially in the tube or what locates the fixed end of the torsion bar if that's what it uses.
Can someone please enlighten me?
I have some pictures I can upload if needed once I sus this particular forum's method of doing so.
Furthermore I wonder if a more modern galvanized rubber sprung axle would retrofit straight in the slot? Are they standard with AL-KO ? I heard somewhere that ftf "became" AL-KO .
Thank you.