the splines one actually works fine for that purpose.the factory approved procedure is to oval out the strut to spindle mount hole on the strut.
by the way, does anyone know the nonsplined strut to spindle bolt part number? i cant imagine the splined one would slide properly if i elongated the strut mount hole and fixed my camber that way
You beat me to it. I was gonna mention (and you are the second time) that Vorschlag is the only plate I’ve heard of that actually will increase some noticeable NVH. However, that same research reveals a completely unanimous verdict that they are the nicest pieces money can buy.I’ve previously run vorshlag plates (they’re awesome) but spherical mount camber plates absolutely add road noise and crash harder on bumps. Not excessive but noticeable.
That is the recommended (and only) method shown in the service manual but only for the upper hole and only 1 mm. The Ford "service" bolts are not splined and are lightly smaller diameter than the originals but are rated for the same torque.just throwing this out there…
has anyone tried ovaling out the three holes that the strut mount bolts come up through the chassis? that would probably allow some camber adjustment.
Because of the distance between the strut mount and the camber pivot point (the ball joint) it takes a lot of movement of the strut mount to get a big camber change. Camber plates are the real way.just throwing this out there…
has anyone tried ovaling out the three holes that the strut mount bolts come up through the chassis? that would probably allow some camber adjustment.