I believe he asked if it was safe to run the vehicle without the sway bar.. and the answer is IMO, yes....
The car WILL handle differently, as with ANY change to the suspension, but it will not make the car dangerous to drive. Off roaders have been pulling sway bars for years to allow both sides of the front suspension to operate independently.
Remember here, as long as you don't expect a 40 year old VW chassis thats been cut in half and re-welded, and the steel body replaced with a fiberglass shell to handle like a modern car, and drive accordingly.. you'll be ok.
Now shocks are a different story.. everyone has their own opinion on those. That wasn't what he was asking, I just brought it up in explanation on my setup. For me, I don't have any issues. Remember, I don't use my car as a daily either. But as usual the topic starts a debate...
Shocks ONLY dampen the suspension movement. The car is supported ONLY by the torsion leaves. Will you have more "bounce" in the suspension with out shocks? Yes.. thats the effect from removing the dampers. Is it dangerous.. we'll everyone has their opinions. Keep in mind though.. the VW suspension was set up and optimized for a 1700lb full sedan weight. Even if you keep all of the factory VW suspension on your buggy, its not properly set up for buggies weight and will have its own negative handling effects or characteristics.
David O' wrote:The sway bar MIGHT not be needed on the front end of a dune buggy, but I would'nt want to drive a beetle that way, due to the high roll center of the chassis design. In 1968, Volkswagen put a Z bar at the back of the cars to control the roll of the vehicle even more.
Sorry, I have to nit pick, but this is not correct.. the Z bar was added in '67 as well as all the rest of the produced swing axle cars from that point as
an overload spring. VW did this to combat the horrible handing of the stock swing axle.. VW in '67 softened the spring rate in the rear torsion housings, and raised the front suspension to help the swing axle handling (this is why all the '67 are real nose high stock). Since they softened the rear torsion housing, they also added the overload spring (z-bar) to compensate for heavy loads with the softer torsion bars.
If were arguing safety here.. lets be honest. The rear VW swing axle in its stock form is probably about the worst rear suspension design ever conceived. I won't go into all the reasons.. you can add a camber compensator and that will help, but its still not on par with ANY modern vehicle.
Moral of the story.. remember what your driving and drive accordingly..
PS: I'm not trying to be rude or disrespectful so please don't take my post personal
(edited for gender clarification

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