- Business Hours: Monday-Friday
8am-5pm CST.
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- Please remember that Phil's Inc.
welcomes your toll free phone call.
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- Our sales sales can also assist you
in purchasing exactly what you are looking for.
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Phil's Inc.
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2204 Ashland Ave.
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Evanston, IL 60201
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(847) 869-2434
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- What is Polyurethane?
Polyurethane is a term used to describe a wide ranging family
of elastomers (any compound exhibiting the characteristics of
natural rubber; stretchy and elastic.). Poly meaning "many"
and "urethane" the classification of the chemical structure.
Polyurethane or urethane for short, is used as a solid cast material
(bushings). Polyurethane can be as soft as a rubber band or as
hard as plastic.
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- Is there a benefit over rubber?
Many advantages can be found over rubber. Depending on the formulation,
urethane has a higher load-bearing capacity, greater tear strength,
better compression set, greater abrasion resistance, tolerant
to greases, oils and ozone and allows for more unique designs.
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- What's the difference between
rubber and urethane?
Rubber is the sap of trees found mostly in tropical climates.
The sap is altered by mixtures of carbon (why it's black) and
mineral oils and various fillers. Polyurethane is completely
chemical or man-made. Because rubber is a biodegradable product
it is affected by ozone and will over time dry rot and degrade,
while urethane will keep going and going.
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- How are urethanes rated?
There are approximately 20 categories in which urethanes are
rated based on physical properties. The most common is hardness.
Others include: abrasion resistance; compression set; tensile
strength; tear strength; etc.
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- How are bushings manufactured?
Most all urethane bushings and mounts are manufactured from a
two part liquid cast system. It basically constitutes a polyol
or prepolymer and a curative. Much like epoxy, when the two are
mixed together, they begin to harden and form a solid material.
This mixture is poured into molds where it forms the bushing,
mount or pad when it turns a hard solid. Other ways include injection
of melted urethane pellets. This is accomplished much like plastic
injection molding where the pellets are melted and forced through
a small opening into a closed mold cavity. Another way is to
cast a solid round bar and then machine it to the desired shape.
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- Is there a difference between
colors?
No. In most cases the color of the part has no relation to the
hardness or other physical characteristic. The pigment used to
color our urethane components is a paste-like product that is
mixed into the urethane in quantities of about 2-4%. The two
most popular colors are red and black, and this is what we stock
for immediate shipment.-
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Does urethane
squeak?
In a word, no. Squeaking is caused by high frequency vibrations
that can be heard rather than felt. It is usually caused by lack
of lubrication, poor installation, incorrect part, urethane that
may be too hard for the application. In sway bar mount applications,
most squeaking comes from not cleaning the sway bar prior to
installing the bushings and not using our "squeak proof"
Supergrease! Additionally, all our dynamic application bushings
feature grooves or splines to hold the grease.
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- Does urethane
ride really hard (harsh)?
The original rubber bushing or mount was fairly soft which helped
to attenuate noise and vibration that is generated by the tires
and road surface. Increasing the hardness of the bushing either
with harder rubber, urethane or even bronze, will allow more
transmission of noise and vibration. Some manufacturers formulate
the hardness and design to reduce this effect. A softer urethane
bushing allows the vehicle to perform better without the harshness,
even over the same hardness rubber piece.
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- Are all urethane
bushings the same? Same material, same hardness?
No, no and no. Each manufacturer has their own idea as to the
best way a bushing should be designed. We select materials based
on physical performance and choose the right hardness for each
application.
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- What does
graphite do? Does PROTHANE have it as well?
Graphite is a soft, black hexagonally crystallized allotrope
of carbon. It is used as a lubricant, pencil lead and in paint.
In urethane bushings it is an attempt to serve as a lubricant
to reduce friction between the pivoting areas. Since it is mixed
into the bushing during the initial casting process, only the
graphite that is on the surface can perform any job of a dry
lubricant, and this only applies to surfaces that have been machined,
not cast. Most all bushings, or at least those that move dynamically,
require a very low coefficient of friction in order to eliminate
heat build up. Graphite alone will not provide enough lubrication,
so grease is also required. PROTHANE does not use graphite
or any other types of fillers as these can detract from the chemical
bond of the molecules that are the strength of urethane itself.
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- Can urethane
be used for all types of vehicles?
Urethane can be formulated for anything from an MG to a Cadillac
to a rough and ready 4X4 or lowered Honda street car.
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- Do I need
special tools to install?
No. Installing urethane components requires no special tools.
However, if unique tools and equipment are required due to the
type of vehicle, you will need them in order to do a correct
job.
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- Will I need
to reuse my metal shells?
PROTHANE has a complete shell program for most popular
applications. Many of our control arm bushing kits come complete
with a new shell. On some applications you will need to reuse
the metal shell, so be very careful when removing it from the
vehicle. The shells themselves are not a replacement item. If
you do damage a shell during the removal procedure, you have
a few choices: Obtain a used piece from a repair shop or salvage
yard or purchase a new shell with rubber bushings from your local
parts store.
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Questions? Give us a call at 1-888-PROTHANE
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Home
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- Why Use Urethane?
Production vehicles are built using rubber bushings in control arms,
strut arms, leaf springs, body mounts, motor mounts, transmission
mounts, sway bars and shocks. Additionally, rubber components can be
found being used on coil spring pads, leaf spring pads and suspension
bump stops. Not only are rubber components on the soft side to
accommodate the typical car and truck buyer, they to deteriorate
rapidly. This contributes to premature component failure, a "spongy"
ride and less than ideal performance handling. Urethane can correct
these conditions, while improving drivability.
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- Copyright Phil's Inc. 1997-2006
all rights reserved.
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