Spohn 399 User Manual

Page 2

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9. Once pinion angle has been set, tighten all jam nuts and rear bracket bolts.

Note: Before adjusting your pinion angle, you must first loosen the two bolts that secure

the two rear solid rod ends to the rear-housing mount. This allows the torque arm the ability

to swivel up or down as you adjust the pinion angle. If you do not loosen these two bolts

the assembly will bind and you will not be able to adjust the pinion angle. After setting the

desired pinion angle, retighten these two bolts.

Ford 9” Rears: For those running a Ford 9” rear - You will notice that the rear mounting

bracket of the torque arm has two sets of mounting holes. On the 9” rear you want to use

the set of mounting holes that are towards the driver’s side of the car. On a stock rear or

12-bolt rear, you would use the set of mounting holes towards the passenger’s side of the

car. The reason for this is that on a 9” rear, due to the larger center section, the torque arm

mount on the rear is actually 1” further to the driver’s side of the car compared to the OEM

rear. Using the set of holes towards the driver’s side of the car in our rear mounting bracket

will move the torque arm back to the OEM location and line it straight up with the front

mount. If your 9” rear is equipped with a nodular (large ribbed) center section, it may be

necessary to grind away part of the rib so it does not interfere with the torque arm’s rear

mounting bracket.

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