Just remember camber bolts (to add scamber) move the wheel towards the strut, so they can cause problems if you're trying to fit a wide front tire.Update:
I ordered new takeoff Ford camber plates of a dark horse / mach 1 vehicle. They finally arrived and I will be installing them soon. Half the price of new ones. These + camber bolts will hopefully get me to -3 front camber without cutting.
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Why did you not want to go past -3? I heard that some go up to -4 for the best tire wear. How was your wear with -2.7?I installed the Steeda camber plates and used the Steeds hole saw to enlarge the strut tower opening. Last year I ran track days at -2.7. This year I put in Ford performance springs and told my alignment guy, "as much as they could get" in front negative camber "not to exceed -3". They set the front to -3.2. I guess they only heard " as much as you can get" part.
The Steed hole saw tool worked very well, very clean cut. A fine file, then some sand paper and a bit if touch up paint on the inner rim of the hole, you'd never know it was modified.
Disagree on my 17 i more than once I went sideways. I counter steered and stayed on track but was no electronic interference for sureI've heard far too often that even with holding the switch for 10 seconds, the car can still turn it back on if it thinks it needs to. Pulling the fuse is the only way to guarantee the nannies won't interfere.
Disagree on my 17 i more than once I went sideways. I counter steered and stayed on track but was no electronic interference for sure
I always track with everything off because to me i get a much better feel of what the car is doing at the limit
Yeah, I also heard that. So not sure what’s going onI don't have any personal experience to go off of here. I've never held the switch down before myself.
Just reiterating what numerous people have claimed. I see this fairly frequently on TMO.
The rears are doable but yes, they are an absolute pain. Try to use a pry-bar or a long stick against the floor as leverage to get a more precise adjustment. It's going to be A LOT of trial and error on jack stands.Would it matter much if I left the rear at stock specs? Meaning -1.5 camber and 0.24-0.30 toe in?
I would be running -3 camber and 0 toe at the front.
Adjusting the front was easy, I tried adjusting the rear but it just isn't doable on jackstands. Local shops don't want to touch it, only some motorsport shops but for a ridiculous amount of money.
Steeda and J&M sell those adjustable camber bolts for the rear, but those look like a pain to install as well. A camber arm is not an option as it would not be streetlegal, I'm already in the grey zone with the front plates don't want to push it any more.
Looks fine to me. You got em working, but they're not chunking and the evidence of heat ripples is minimal.This is my tire wear from 23 laps around Daytona International. 15 of them were hard. The first 8 were easier.
Here's the write up I did.
SCCA Track Night at Daytona International 6/19/25 | 2015+ S550 Mustang Forum (GT, EcoBoost, GT350, GT500, Bullitt, Mach 1) - Mustang6G.com
the 4 tires (picture) are where they were on the car. The fronts are chewed up more than the rears. What are these tires telling me?
I ran last September the same course in the GT with 285 Potenza's square. They looked like every day wear when I changed them out. None of this rash.
These Michelins look melted :(
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