FC304wannabe,
What the guys are trying to point out is that the advice you have been given has probably been worded poorly by the engineer. Some engineers/rego authourities want the
rear track to be the same in the modified car as the original. Track is nrmally measured to the centreline of the tyre, not the diff flanges.
For example, in NSW this is specified by the RTA guidelines as:
"If an axle assembly is shortened then the track width limit is taken as the axle manufacturers original track dimension, less the amount the assembly has been narrowed, plus 25mm."
Track width thus includes both the diff and the wheels. This is where it gets harder, as the Conformodore wheels are very different than the original early Holden ones. For example:
Commodore 6" wheels (152mm) are wider than original early Holden wheels (114mm or 4.5”).
Commodore offset varied from 26-43mm (positive offset in all cases), much bigger than the early Holden offset (6mm positive).
The process the guys are suggesting is:
a) work out what wheels you want (rim width and offset). Aim for standard Commodore dimensions if you can so you don't have to buy custom mags later. This can get even harder when the engineer/rego authority has wheel size limits. For example in NSW for an EK wagon: The vehicle was built in 1961, and hence was not built to comply with ADR 24 (prior to 1973 for passenger cars). With a kerb weight of 1183kg, the maximum permitted rear rim width is 204mm (8 inches).
b) work out where the tyre centres will be relative to the old ones due to the change in width and offset.
c) work out how wide the diff needs to be so that you meet the engineer's track requirement.
These are the NSW guidelines (imagine QLD has similar):
http://www.rta.nsw.gov.au/registration/downloads/vsi/vsi09_rev4.pdfThis post has some info where I went through the NSW guidelines for my EK project:
http://www.fbekholden.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=14204Hope this helps.
Cheers,
Harv.