Now don?t take this wrong, but take a minute or two and review the manufacturing, storing and issuing processes for A arms.
The material for an upper ?A? arm (aka control arm) is 0.125in (average, measured in four places) thick cold rolled steel. It may be supplied to the stamping plant as stock on a roll or in 20 foot long, 12 inch wide strips. It is a medium to dark gray in color.
There are several steps that are needed to form the stock into the arm. I won?t go into which step is first, but; several holes are punched; some holes are tapped; in many steps on a 100 ton or larger, stamping press, the arm begins to take shape, bends started, bends continued, bends finished. Bends are a multi-step process. In all these processes, oil is sprayed on the stock to keep the male and female dies from sticking. Some small scratches from the dies are common. Dies don?t last. Remember, there are two arms per car, and how many cars were produced at your plant that used the same arm from the same dies?
At the final stamped step, the arm is chopped off from the roll (or sheet) and dropped into a pile ? more scratches.
It may be stacked and strapped to a pallet ? more scratches. That is possibly the first direct human contact with an individual arm.
The next steps are hands on. The arm is removed from the pallet ? more scratches. The ball joints riveted in place; stacked when done ? more scratches; the upper arm shaft installed; stacked when done ? more scratches. (At this point, my 65-66 upper A-arms were dip painted.) Stacked and strapped to a pallet ? more scratches. Somewhere the ?correct? spring saddle is bolted in. And yes, there were a few ?special ones? of those too.
From there, a forklift ride, stacking, a trip from the stamping plant to a flatbed truck, or a railroad boxcar ? more scratches.
The pallet is unloaded from the truck/car, received at the assembly plant, inventoried, identified (a paint dab?) and made ready for the assembly line (or lines) ? more scratches. Because of the size and weight of several arms, I assume they are stacked loose on a pallet or open front box, delivered and placed on both sides of the assembly line.
The arm is finally bolted to the car ? more scratches ? a spring installed ? compressed ? more scratches (get the picture ? a lot of scratches happen).
When you ?restore? an A arm, it is a working part of your project. All you want to do is to remove unwanted paint and rust. It is not shiny. It is not sterile. It is not a work of art. It is an assembly line item to be installed on one car out of thousands with a lot of steps that can scratch it. There is no way that several million a-arms can be tumbled.
In other words, don?t overdo your restoration. It?s a car you are working on, not the Sistine Chapel.
Jim