Small update. I did the other LCA today.
I disassembled the old ball joints, which was a real PITA, and cut out the heavy reinforcement plate. I trimmed it and welded it back in its original place. Now there is no question about the strength of the ball joint(my dad had doubts, but he's pleased now).
<<<SNIP>>>
I still need to paint them to match the uppers.
And, you probably need to ream the tapered hole in your Ford spindle to match the taper on the MOPAR ball joint.
IIRC, the taper on the OEM Ford spindle and ball joint is 2 inches-per-foot (approximately 10° ), while the taper on the new ball joint is 1-1/2 inches-per foot (approximately 7-1/2° ).
If you put it together this way, you WILL snap ball joint studs, because the stud taper will only be contacting the hole in the spindle at one small point near the top - not the whole length of the taper - and the bottom of the ball joint stud will have clearance to bend back and forth.
A quick measurement of the old ball joint stud against the new one will show the differences.
BTW, what you have there is a rugged, popular setup that is used in most of the upper-level Late Model divisions of oval track racing in the country - which explains the ready availability of parts and how a ball joint from the late '50s continues to sell so well. It took Moog a while to figure THAT one out.
If you have an oval-track chassis builder nearby, he'll probably have both reamers available....Some oval track teams also have the tools.
If you were closer to me, I also have both reamers.
B.P.