What is the first thing you noticed when you pulled apart your suspension? Did the rubber tear away and crumble into a hundred pieces? Are you wondering how long your suspension would have lasted if you had kept driving under these conditions? If you're doing a car with safety and longevity in mind (over Concourse-correct restoration, of course), the only pieces on your VW that should remain rubber are the tires (and even they aren't real rubber anymore) and the windshield wiper blades. Bushings for control arms, strut towers, body mounts, trans mounts, sway bars and shocks should be updated to urethane and BUGPACK's distributors are the places to get them.
Since BUGPACK's inception in 1968, when at the time it only sold approximately 50 products from its catalog, it has been joined by over 20 different companies under the banner Dee Engineering, providing the VW world (as well as a host of different car enthusiast groups) quality products for most any automotive buildup. One of their premiere lines of product is their variety of urethane components, designed, tested and built to replace most all rubber suspension and mounting points in any year VW.
We had the chance to visit the BUGPACK facilities in Ontario, Calif., to see how they make the myriad VW parts that have been so popular in not only the performance segment of our hobby but the serious restorers as well.
First off, what exactly is this mysterious urethane? For you technical lot out there, urethane (also referred to as polyurethane with very little difference) is the name given to a class of NCO (isocyanate) terminated resins with cross-linking or chain-extension intermediates called curing agents. Okay, for the rest of us, urethane is a chemically produced synthetic material used to replace the usual rubber parts of a car (in our case, a Volkswagen).
Oil, water and weather resistance, ozone and oxidation resistance, and resistance to many chemicals, urethane is the perfect substitute to fight the normally harsh environments most of the car's parts are subjected to. Some types of urethane materials are radiation, fungus and bacteria resistant--in case you ever run over a radio-active bacteria-infected chuck of cheese on the road, you're protected.
Some of urethane's other benefits include: high tensile and tear strength, outstanding abrasion resistance (compared to rubber and plastics), higher load-bearing capacity, higher impact resistance and resilience, excellent retention of properties at both very low and very high temperatures.
The process to produce it is decidedly simple. Invented in the '60s, reaction injection molding (RIM) is a process by which two liquid components--a polymer resin blend and a modified disocynate--are mixed together under high pressure and flowed into a mold as a low-viscosity liquid. Once mild heat is applied and the reaction is complete, the mold is split away and the final product is a urethane that takes on the details of the mold cavity with high degrees of accuracy and repeatability.
...
>>next page