i have seen people putting the front radius arms onto the rear so i assume that you could put the rear on the front. would this be possible?
This is often done my comp safari racers for a number of reasons.
1) Commonality of parts....all the radius arms are the same :)
2) The std rear geometry has a roll centre that is higher than the front, doing the 'front on the rear' setup (if done right) makes the front and rear roll centres at the same high giving a horizontal roll axis and this give greater stability at speed thru corners.
3) The rear ball joint and/or mounting can break when given a lot of punishment at speed. When this happens the axle 'flops' forwards and breaks the break pipes/rear prop UJ/shock and/or shock mountings as well.
Your basic idea is sound, but reason 3 above is why all 3-link systems on LRs have been built around very strong gearbox crossmembers (usually custom made for the job) to which the centre link is mounted.
Depending upon how you mount the A-frame you may run into problem also. With the links converging at the axle end I think you will have problems finding room for the mounts at either side of the chassis without conflicting with the exhaust for instance. The other way around and you have all the forces converging at the gearbox crossmember....is previous paragraph :)
You also need to think about vertical separation of the links. For instance 'normal' 3-link systems have the outer links mounted high on the axle casing and the centre link lower than the diff. The upper and lower links should also stay as parallel as possible when viewed from the side. This will minimise diff pinion angle changes when the suspension cycles from droop to compression.
Apologies for all the 'you just swallowed a book' type theory, but it is (I'm afraid) a more complex than you may think. By all means bit it a go, we may well all learn something :D