There are different kinds of "bind".
When the car rolls, the lcas are not quite square to the brackets. This is not desired, but it's unavoidable. Poly bushings can bind in that situation, and rod ends, which can pivot, fix that.
Anti-squat works by deliberately using the acceleration force to lock the suspension, so the car won't squat. Rod ends do little to reduce that kind of bind. In a drag racing car, particularly with soft and low pressure rear tires, you can use a whole lot of antisquat, but if you're trying to corner on street tires while accelerating, too much antisquat becomes a bad thing, because the locked up rear suspension won't handle the corner well.
When the car rolls, the lcas are not quite square to the brackets. This is not desired, but it's unavoidable. Poly bushings can bind in that situation, and rod ends, which can pivot, fix that.
Anti-squat works by deliberately using the acceleration force to lock the suspension, so the car won't squat. Rod ends do little to reduce that kind of bind. In a drag racing car, particularly with soft and low pressure rear tires, you can use a whole lot of antisquat, but if you're trying to corner on street tires while accelerating, too much antisquat becomes a bad thing, because the locked up rear suspension won't handle the corner well.
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