14" alloys, will not work with drop spindles, 13", I really doubt it. Maybe reg. disk spindles might work.
Ted
I wonder if the same holds true with the DDS wheels. The alloys have a LOT of positive offset so the wheels completely wrap around the brakes. The DDS wheels on the other hand have negative offset. There might be sufficient clearance with the DDS wheel.
Do you absolutely have to have dropped spindles? If it's a kingpin car you can get a low stance and stock-feeling ride quality by pulling leaves. On my '62 I installed the adjusters as if I was going to raise the car. With the adjusters all the way down I started pulling leaves until I got the lowest ride height I would use. I cut the ends and centers from the pulled leaves and brazed them to the remaining leaves so the set screws would capture the springs properly.
I can raise the nose to nearly stock height. I run stock-style Cofap dampers and the ride is incredible. Twin-trailing-link suspension has inherently poor handling and braking qualities so there's little reason to miss them if they do suffer. I've run that same setup since 1988 with very positive results.
I've done it to ball-joint cars but you can only lower the suspension about 1 1/2 inches before ride quality suffers. But then again if you're running a 13" DDS wheel chances are you are not going to build a poser pan scraper anyway.