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I did a lot of searches like "10 front drum" and "10 sbp drum", but I still couldn't find some posts I remember reading a few years ago.
If the search engine happened to be "thinking" OR instead of PHRASE when you made those searches you got a huge number of hits. "10 OR front OR drum" etc. It does that a lot now. I just got 5848 hits on "10 front drum." As my daddy used to say, "That's too much sugar for a penny."
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It would be a great improvement to .org if there were definitive articles on:
Large Bolt Pattern Disc Upgrade (and rear end swap)
Small Bolt Pattern Disc Upgrade
10" Drum Upgrade
Doing a front end rebuild on a 1960s car is a major undertaking for a do-it-yourselfer. Upgrading the braking system is even more advanced.
Doing both at the same time is terrifying.
A step-by-step guide would have been helpful in my case.
There are some real experienced mechanics/engineers on this site, but maybe they don't recognize how useful these ABC articles could be.
I think it would enhance the site, because newbies could be directed to read the article. The newbie could then base questions on one of these conversion articles.
The experts then would have to deal with fewer dumb questions.
At least it would be easier to direct the newbies back on the right track.
I used Condran's book*, several Internet articles and this site for my 10" drum swap. It was difficult because I had to substitute rare Drum brake data into the common (but often contradictory) Disc brake conversion directions.
I feel I did my best, both when I asked questions here and when I was doing the mechanic work, but the experience and the result both are less than I expected.
Of the 31 articles here, most range between advanced and arcane.
Some low-tech articles on installing a front end kit and modifying the braking system would be great.
*Some have said that the Performance Handling for Classic Mopars book has some wrong information, but I still don't know what parts are wrong.
You make an interesting point. Or rather some interesting points. I wonder how often a new article actually appears. If a writer has to read 10,000 messages to put one together, probably one every few years.
Of course the handy one would save the whole site onto his local disk drive and use a decent search tool there. You can use Google to search a site and I often use it here, but altho it will usually find phrases when SIX can't, sometimes it can't find the proverbial nose on your face. It only finds the word "overdrive" 8 times on the whole site.