wheel alignment
#5
The front camber can be adjusted via the upper control arms but it's a massive pain in the ***. I have already decided to resign myself to new 19" front tires every year rather than go through trying to set it.
#7
From what I've been told, it has to do with the angle of the control arms, relative to the body of the strut. Basically, you're supposed to position the control arms at a specific angle relative to the strut, and then torque them down (for some reason, 43 degrees or so is what sticks in my mind). In that way, you preload the arms, and when the car is reassembled and the weight of the car is resting on the arms, it sets the camber angle.
I haven't done it myself, but I know a guy who did his that way. He was on stock suspension so the angle he set was by-the-book. For a lowered car, it'd be trial and error to find the correct arm-to-strut angle to set the camber to spec. Ergo, screw it. I'll buy tires. I have no interest in removing and reassembling my front suspension 6-7 times to set it correctly.
I haven't done it myself, but I know a guy who did his that way. He was on stock suspension so the angle he set was by-the-book. For a lowered car, it'd be trial and error to find the correct arm-to-strut angle to set the camber to spec. Ergo, screw it. I'll buy tires. I have no interest in removing and reassembling my front suspension 6-7 times to set it correctly.
#9
From what I've been told, it has to do with the angle of the control arms, relative to the body of the strut. Basically, you're supposed to position the control arms at a specific angle relative to the strut, and then torque them down (for some reason, 43 degrees or so is what sticks in my mind). In that way, you preload the arms, and when the car is reassembled and the weight of the car is resting on the arms, it sets the camber angle.
I haven't done it myself, but I know a guy who did his that way. He was on stock suspension so the angle he set was by-the-book. For a lowered car, it'd be trial and error to find the correct arm-to-strut angle to set the camber to spec. Ergo, screw it. I'll buy tires. I have no interest in removing and reassembling my front suspension 6-7 times to set it correctly.
I haven't done it myself, but I know a guy who did his that way. He was on stock suspension so the angle he set was by-the-book. For a lowered car, it'd be trial and error to find the correct arm-to-strut angle to set the camber to spec. Ergo, screw it. I'll buy tires. I have no interest in removing and reassembling my front suspension 6-7 times to set it correctly.
I've only heard of preloading (at least for the A4/A6) the suspension for when you do suspension work to make sure that the bushings are at an optimal position to prevent tearing.
Last edited by MetalMan; 07-29-2010 at 12:31 PM.