We're located about an hour west of Toronto, in southern Ontario.
Address
244 Woolwich St S, Unit 4, Breslau Ontario. N0B 1M0
Hours
Monday - Friday
Please call before coming.
Saturday
Closed
Sunday
Closed
ONLINE STORE
Problem Solving Hot Rod Chassis Parts Since 1978
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Mustang II crossmember kit, for conventional coil-overs or Shockwaves. Ships for 10% of the price + $10. Available as a welded crossmember or a ready-to-weld kit.
We've added a Shockwave specific kit which includes longer spacers (necessary when the mounting plates are widened to fit the air spring bellows), gussets, and 5/8" upper mounting hardware. The spacers and gussets are to be welded to the upper mounting plates for additional support.
This is a Mustang II kit for conventional coil-overs (the same style used in the rear) instead of stock-type springs and shocks. This lets you use different spring rates and maintain the same ride height by adjusting the lower spring collar on the coil-over. Often the coil-over shock has an adjustable rebound rate, too. Use conventional (NOT "MUSTANG II STYLE") coil-overs that have a ride height of 11-1/2 – 12”. Use Mustang II tubular upper arms and Mustang II tubular lower A-arms designed for coil-overs and no strut rod. This kit uses the stock Mustang II geometry and track width. The 56-1/2” width is used in Fords and Chevs up to 1948 and many other vehicles. 48-52 Ford F1 pickups look good with the 58-1/2” kit. ’53-56 Ford pickups should use the 60-1/2” kit. 2nd series ’54-’59 Chev pickups should use the 60-1/2” kit. Set up the front end at the height you want by notching the crossmember and towers to fit your frame. Detailed installation instructions are supplied with the kit and online by clicking the link below. Crossmember & upper towers are made from 3/16″ mild steel.
All kits are now shipped as two CNC formed pieces which nest together. Control arm mounts are now formed as well. Rack mounts are incorporated into the crossmember design and rotate the rack back 20° to get the input shaft lower. Stock, manual or power racks or later model Mustang II or T-Bird power racks can be used. The later power rack will require the Power Rack Spacer and longer bolts, as described in the power rack mount spacer section. The rack is positioned so the bellows will clear most aftermarket full A-Arms (such as Heidt’s, Total Cost Involved, Fatman, etc). Anti-dive is built into the upper bracket.
Either manual or power steering can be used and the passenger side mount has a slot to take the later model power rack. As with all Mustang II aftermarket crossmembers, spacers must be used with the later (Fox-body) power rack. These spacers are available from Welder Series as #24410.
These kits are designed to lower the front of the vehicle. Additional work might be required to keep a frame at the stock ride height.
If you specify a welded kit, the corner-to-corner welds are neat but not ground. The front and rear faces of the upper towers are formed.
What appears as lines in the pictures are actually laser-cut slits in the plate. These slits make it easy to form the rack mounts using an adjustable wrench (for increased leverage).
Upper control arm mounts are now supplied with the front and rear sections formed already.
The holes for the lower control arms are 5/8". OEM stamped lower arms used a 1/2" bolt. Lots of aftermarket lower A-arms use 5/8" bolts.
Installation instructions show how to set up the front end at the ride height you want. Rack extenders or Fairmont tie rod ends must be used on 58-1/2″, 60-1/2", and 62-1/2″ kits. The width is measured at the rotor wheel mounting surface. The width will vary, depending on the brake kit used.
Track width is the rotor wheel mounting surface-to-surface dimension. Welder Series makes 4 widths: stock (56-1/2″), and 2″, 4" and 6″ wider (58-1/2″, 60-1/2″ & 62-1/2"). These are nominal dimensions. The final track width is dependent on the control arms, wheels, and brake system used. An easy way to estimate the stock track width is to measure tire tread center-to-center.
The outside frame width is less critical than track width, but is a consideration. Our 56-1/2″ kit likes a frame o.d. of 26″ – 30″. The 58-1/2″ kit likes 28" – 32″, the 60-1/2″ kit likes 30" – 34″, and the 62-1/2" kit likes 32" - 36". If the frame doesn’t correspond to these dimensions, there are work-arounds that we can suggest.
Please note: lower control arm pivot tubes and gussets are not included because they are often included with the arms. Please see the Related Products section below to add a control arm mounting kit, brake kit, or power rack spacer kit.
Welder Series has a free service to help builders lay out the crossmember and upper tower cut lines. Click here for the work sheet. If you fill them out, take pictures of them, and email the pages back to us, we will give you drawings showing the sections to be removed. These worksheets can also give us the info we need to provide you with boxing plates. We’d give you a price for the plates and you can decide if you want to order them or make your own.
It is easiest to install any Mustang II crossmember into a rectangular tube frame. If your frame is a stamping with pockets for the coil spring and/or mounting provision for upper and lower control arms, it might be necessary to remove a section of the frame and replace it with tubing. There are several pictures in the thumbnails showing how this was done.
For assembly and installation instructions, click here.
Click to see our “Mustang II Installed Pics” blog category.
For a list of additional components (not supplied by Welder Series) for your front end, click here.
Click here to see our constantly updating Mustang II application chart.
Click here to see the current list of cut line drawings. We may have one for your car.
Click here to watch the Trucks!TV Mustang II install on Powerblock.
Click here for the PDF version of the magazine install.
Check out an assembly/install article from Rod & Custom Magazine.
Ships via UPS to the lower 48 States and 10 Provinces. No duty or brokerage charges. No surprises. Tracking information will be emailed.
Buying a complete hub-to-hub “package” can often be more convenient than sourcing all of the parts separately. Many of our dealers offer kits which include brakes, spindles, rack, control arms, etc. Please visit our Dealers page to find the dealer nearest you.
Popular Applications:
56-1/2″ Track Width:
1933-48 Ford Cars
1935-41 Ford Pickups
1935-54 Chev Cars
1954-62 Corvette
1937-55 Chev Pickups (early series)
1933-38 Dodge Cars
1933-38 Plymouth
1934-47 Studebaker
58-1/2" Track Width:
1948-52 Ford F1 Pickups (this width works well for lowered pickups)
60-1/2″ Track Width:
1948-52 Ford F1 Pickups (this width works well for pickups that are not lowered much)
1953-79 Ford F100 Pickups
1955-59 (second series) Chev Pickups
62-1/2" Track Width:
Mid-60's Dodge Pickups
Every customer is different. You’re different from the next customer. That’s why they’re called 'custom'ers. There is no formula, no equation that will work with all of you. It takes a different approach to everyone to determine how best to serve anyone. Some people need videos, some people need descriptions. Some people need us to weld it together. Our approach has been, and will always be, to serve each of you where you are and to treat you the same way we would like to be treated. We officially opened the doors to Welder Series in 2005. That doesn’t sound like very long, because the product line has been percolating for over 40. Paul Horton began developing and building many of the parts we still manufacture when I wasn’t yet a twinkle in Dorothy’s eye. Thanks very much for your business and support over the years.
-Paul, Dorothy, and DW (me) Horton
Note DW and Paul Horton at Welder Series absolutely rock and were quick, prompt, by far the best communication I’ve had with an online vendor in a LONG LONG TIME… (Sorry but their response time was bar none awesome). Very rarely do you find the level of dedication to a customer, communication, and a rewarding experience for both the buyer and supplier. I bought a pedal assembly a bit ago, and that experience automatically ensured that I will source Welder Series before I search for another vendor. Paul and DW have it together and will make a solution to your problem… and probably at the best price around to boot.
I have purchased a few of the products that Welder Series offers and been pleased each time. The products are as advertised and they ship in a timely manner.
I am also impressed with their customer service. I asked them if they had a brake pedal kit (mount, pivot, pedal, bushings, etc) for a right hand drive application. They did not have a kit per se but were able to put together pieces from their catalog to make one I could modify the Master Cylinder mount to make it face the other way (I had to cut the top off and weld it back on facing the other way, cheaper than ordering a one off part, and I don’t have a way to bend metal that thick, everything else fit up as intended). It worked as they described.
I just finished installing a Welder Series rear sway bar kit over the weekend. My all-steel ’35 sedan handled in the traditional “scrape off the running boards” way… even with a front sway bar. The kit went together nicely, everything fit perfectly and now the car goes around a corner 100% better… no more extreme lean. DW was a huge help in putting together a little bit different kit for me since I am using a tubular rear crossmember and also made some suggestions that really helped in the fabrication. You can depend on these guys… they are “for real” hot rod guys that offer really cool products. I’ll post a picture or two when I get the chance to put the car on a hoist for a better photo op. Thanks DW & crew.
DW Horton
Son of Paul (and Dorothy)
Welder Series is a family business focused on serving our customers with consistently high quality parts, exceptional service and support, and reasonable prices.
We're located about an hour west of Toronto, in southern Ontario.
Hours
Monday - Friday
Please call before coming.
Saturday
Closed
Sunday
Closed