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Bird. It's the word...
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Problems with Front Camber
After recently upgrading all my suspension bushing with weltmeister, I took the car in today for a 4 wheel alignment.
I gave them my prefered settings (Rear -1.8 and Front -1.0), however they could not do any better than L -2.28 R -1.76 What would be causing the lack of adjustment? A camber brace has been a suggested addition to help push on the towers? Good idea? Input welcome ![]()
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John Forcier Current: 68L 2.0 Hotrod - build underway |
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Too big to fail
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You shouldn't have to be 'pushing' anything. Sounds like something is bent.
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"You go to the track with the Porsche you have, not the Porsche you wish you had." '03 E46 M3 '57 356A Various VWs |
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Bird. It's the word...
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Hmmm, that's what I was afraid of. The rear adjusted perfectly, but they complained of "a lack of adjustability" on the front.
Cheers
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John Forcier Current: 68L 2.0 Hotrod - build underway |
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Santa Clara, CA
Posts: 5,668
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John
Is your car lowered? That can cause this problem. You can do some grinding to the hole at the top of the shock tower to pick up a little more range.
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Chuck Moreland - elephantracing.com - vonnen.com |
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Bird. It's the word...
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Okay, that would explain quite a bit!
I lowered the car by about 1" when I did the front A arms. So a combination of lifting the front a little and reaming the hole ![]() Thanks Chuck, your advice is invaluable ![]()
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John Forcier Current: 68L 2.0 Hotrod - build underway |
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Location: Santa Clara, CA
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John,
Ream here: I took out about 3/16 inch and gained and extra degree of range. Your rear sounds like it's fine. But you can gain range by grinding the spring plate too. Or you can fit a smaller bolt to give more range. ![]() Good luck.
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Chuck Moreland - elephantracing.com - vonnen.com |
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Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 298
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I've seen this before. It was caused by a cracked weld where the strut tube inserts into the spindle. They just tack weld those parts and a good pot hole or curb hit will bust that weld. Might want to check that out prior to grinding. It's the kind of thing that you might not notice unless you look for it.
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1973 911T Sepia Brown MFI 1986 Carrera Meteor Gray Metallic |
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Schleprock
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Frankfort IL USA
Posts: 16,639
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John,
Go to this thread and read the second scanned picture I posted. Towards the bottom in Tech. Tip One, it says that some 911's are hard to get neg. camber, blah blah blah. I'm not saying this Weltmeister info. is gospel, just saying that it's not necessarily something wrong with your car. Cambermeister Instructions
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Kevin L '86 Carrera "Larry" |
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Irrationally exuberant
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A lot of 911 guys would love to get that much camber for the track. Kumho's want 2-3 degrees of negative camber for example.
-Chris |
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York, USA
Posts: 4,499
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Had the same problem. Bought a set of ERP monoball top shock mounts, and that afforded some more (i.e. less negative camber) adjustment range, plus I also reamed away a little of the metal as was suggested above.
STephan
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Stephan Wilkinson '83 911SC Gold-Plated Porsche '04 replacement Boxster |
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Bird. It's the word...
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Thanks! Great stuff from everybody.
One day I'll have a weekend where all I do is drive my car ![]() Now where is that die-grinder.......
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John Forcier Current: 68L 2.0 Hotrod - build underway |
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