This past long weekend allowed me time to install the new 28.5mm sway bar and I am a very happy camper! Thanks to all who helped with advice, info, and parts contacts to make it possible.
I just took it for a spin and hit some corners hard enough to really feel the improvement. There is much less body roll now and it didn't seem to be rough or harsh at all over a few speed bumps. Obviously I can't quantify anything with a specific measurement (unless someone knows a method?) but I feel certain that I hit some corners that would have been close to losing it with the original setup and now it sails through with finesse. I'm not talking crazy or reckless driving here, this is just taking a harder turn at 30mph, the way you would in any newer sports car. With the original setup, the roll was a bit scary and the rear end started coming around, mucho oversteer. That is just not fun. Now...FUN!!! :-)
Maybe you are thinking I shouldn't push a pagoda that hard but I'm realistically just never going to have a new 911 to toss around, so this is it, it has to be fun to drive as well as beautiful to look at. Of course, as with all of my mods this is all completely bolt on and reversible to completely original in probably less than an hour not counting clean up.
That said, it did take me all weekend to install and adjust because it wasn't a perfect fit out of the box, although it was fixable with a grinder and drill followed by primer and paint. The right end of the bar didn't position exactly where it should and, as someone warned, the much thicker bar just touched the bottom of the AC compressor pulley. Once I measured multiple times I removed some steel bits and bent some other steel bits and it was fine. Nothing near enough to effect the bar strength though. I definitely recommend the 3/8 hardened end link hardware because the original just doesn't seem stout enough for this new bar.
All of the custom urethane parts fit perfectly Wally, thank you very much! ...and not a peep or creak out of any of it using that nice thick grease.
It does seem to sit about 1/2 inch higher in than it did before. I believe the new bar combines with the stiff urethane and slightly shorter end links to form a more rigid structure that must provide more vertical support. I don't know if I care and I wont try to do anything about it until everything settles in. I might be imagining it but I believe the brake dive is a little less too. Possibly just due to much stronger and stiffer parts up there resisting movement in any axis. I'm certain the bar to link joint must be a lot more rigid now.
All in all this was a very good project! Thanks much to Jacktheknife for getting the ball rolling.
Now I get to start the interior work since I've pretty much finished every other major electrical and mechanical item on the list.
Cheers! Mark