A Panhard Rod finally made it to the top of the to-do list. The Mulfab kit consists of a square hollow section crossmember with welded endplates each with 4 holes, a tubular rod with left and right handed threaded eyes each end, a leaf spring clamp consisting of a pair of flat plates each with 4 holes and the necessary fixing bolts – 5/16” UNF and 7/16” UNF. The rod is fixed between robust spacer tubes welded to the crossmember and lower leaf spring clamp plate.
Off we go by jacking up the rear of the car and inserting large timber blocks under the chassis just forward of the rear wheels.
Marking out the drill positions on the underside of the chassis angle section rails for the 8 x 5/16” crossmember fixing bolts needs to be accurately undertaken as there is little room for error. The crossmember and chassis rails were first measured to give approximate location requirements before clamping with a pair of G clamps and finally adjusting. I used the point of a 7.5mm dia drill, hand rotated in the 8mm dia endplate holes, to mark the hole centres in the chassis rail underseal. The crossmember was removed and the drill marks were then centre popped and progressively drilled out using new cobalt bits from 2mm dia through to 8.5mm dia. Underseal was liberally applied to the freshly cut holes. Once the underseal had dried, the crossmember was bolted to the chassis rails tightening in diagonal sequence. So far, so good.
Next job was fixing the 2 plates forming the spring clamp and this is where the fun started... The location is extremely cramped and well lubricated with bike chain squirt. Getting nuts to start on the 2 outer bolts was only achieved by rotating the plates around the leaf springs. Once a start was achieved on the outer nuts it became apparent that one of the leaf springs was slightly out of vertical alignment with the remainder. This effectively prevented the inner bolts from engaging in the bottom plate holes. This was overcome by grinding a taper on each bolt and tapping the head of each nut from above. This necessitated removal of the tool tray and involved a long steel bar. A start could then be achieved on the nuts to the 2 inner bolts.
![[Linked Image]](https://tm-img.com/images/2024/06/13/13d9dfce-777c-4390-bb61-3d7191b3ec11.jpg)
The rod was then loosely bolted to the crossmember on the offside and the car lowered to the ground to load the leaf springs. From above, a stiff wire hook was used to pick the rod from the floor. The rod was then rotated to align with the hole in the lower leaf spring clamp plate, fixing bolt inserted and a temporary 7/16” UNF locknut I happened to have loosely fitted. The car was then jacked up again to gain access beneath to tighten up all bolts and replace the temporary locknut with the supplied Nyloc nut. The crossmember bolt was lockwired for security and protective tubing pushed over the projecting bolt threads. Job done.
![[Linked Image]](https://tm-img.com/images/2024/06/13/425a472c-1a18-4a46-b1e9-5609cde6d56c.jpg)
![[Linked Image]](https://tm-img.com/images/2024/06/13/b561dc57-4574-42c9-8c3a-884821e37554.jpg)
Was it all worth it? For me, most definitely and almost on a par with brake reaction bars for instant grin factor. The rear end now feels much more planted and predictable when making progress through bends and roundabouts. Should have been standard fitment, but that’s another story.