This is wonderful except which Aero do their trunnions fit?
According to my research of the parts books, there were 6 different lower trunnions listed:
1. 803215 (2.5° - discontinued late in the 1952 run, book lists the serial numbers of the cars),
2. superceded by 806651 (0° - which was also superceded if the spindle was replaced),
3. 811920 (according to a mimeograph update sheet sent to parts departments and not documented elsewhere to my knowledge) if the spindle was replaced,
4. 809364 (noted in the preliminary Lark parts book but no notice of this part number exists anywhere else so it probably never happened),
5. 811701 for 1954's (but not in the final supplement, leading me to believe it may not have been used either)
6. and 907172 for 1954's and 1955's in the final parts book supplement.
The first four numbers used "screw, pivot, trunnion, lower" 803005 which is 5/8" - 11 X 1.22, the last two used the beefier (made for 226 engine cars) 811707 "lower trunnion bolt" which is 3/4" - 11 X 4." The early models used two lower bolts, whereas the 1954-55 models used one longer bolt. The two-bolt trunnions were a weak design and could cause the wheel to collapse after years of wear. Mine did.
The upper trunnions remained the same through 1955: 803019 with 803020 ("bolt, upper control arm trunnion, 5/8" - 11 X 3.53").
So you can rest assured the upper trunnion and bolt kit is correct (their part number 15640) but which one is the lower (their part number 15736)? I will call them and follow up on this.