Gents,
As a first time buyer (1968 427/435 coupe) I am particularly
interested in this subject. I checked the frame on this car
very carefully and it appears to be solid. But what is prompting
me to write is something that I saw the very first time I
jacked the car up. When I jack the car on one side at the point
where the frame begins to dogleg I can detect a difference in
the gap between the door and the back of the car once both
the front and rear wheels (one side) have left the ground.
Now the car is a t-top model and I suspect that the body
should exhibit SOME flex when jacked at a single location
but just how much flex should I expect?? Currently the gap
grows about 1/4 of an inch during the jacking procedure.
Please respond back to me so that I can start breathing
again.
An Anxious Corvette owner
William Brown
p.s. Thanks!
As a first time buyer (1968 427/435 coupe) I am particularly
interested in this subject. I checked the frame on this car
very carefully and it appears to be solid. But what is prompting
me to write is something that I saw the very first time I
jacked the car up. When I jack the car on one side at the point
where the frame begins to dogleg I can detect a difference in
the gap between the door and the back of the car once both
the front and rear wheels (one side) have left the ground.
Now the car is a t-top model and I suspect that the body
should exhibit SOME flex when jacked at a single location
but just how much flex should I expect?? Currently the gap
grows about 1/4 of an inch during the jacking procedure.
Please respond back to me so that I can start breathing
again.
An Anxious Corvette owner
William Brown
p.s. Thanks!
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