hi, if the engineers/ bean counters at triumph/ British Leyland could have saved just a 1 penny on a cheaper front bumper set up would you not think they would have..
example... why does the cambelt on a car always fail if not changed.. because they are made to a price.. about 10,000 miles over the recommended..
from my understanding of it, the idea goes back to cars in the 1920's or something... you have a ridged piece of steel mounted to the car frame on rubber blocks.. ( the weights must be there for added mass) when you hit a bump or the like the body on a car twists and shakes... these twisting/ shaking actions are dampened down by being a bolted to something ridged.. the rubber lets it shake a bit, to soften the ride...reducing the flexing but not making it too ridged.
bit like the buildings with the ball in the middle of them to help stop the structure failing during a earthquake.
here have a link..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuned_mass_damper
so doses any one really think that mucking about in their garage at home and driving it once a week they can find out more about a car, than the guys going out over the same road/ track day after day with test equipment wired to everything.
perhaps we could start a topic on spot welds failing ready for the later enquires..
I notice the rubber mounting blocks are getting hard to come by, so i'm up for anyone's..... no longer required.