Toe looks great, no need for concern, although your initial rear setting would be better. Front looks perfect for a street car.Thanks, it looks like the car is ready for pickup tomorrow, so I'm gonna go get her.
Here is the alignment sheet- how does this look??
camber looks pretty aggressive and I'm a little concerned by the rear toe- is this a concern?
More negative rear = a bit of safety factor. If you are tracking the car, you'll actually want the front to be in the -2 to -2.5 deg range, as high as -3 or so for more dedicated track cars.So-having the front and rear camber in the same range is preferred? I noticed that Ford's Track alignment specs have a bigger negative camber out back compared to the front spec. How does the bigger negative camber # in the rear affect how the car handles compared to having the front and rear camber in the same range (-1.5ish)?
I would concur as a starting point for that reason as well as the fact that the rear is a proportionally stiffer bar, in terms of over stock.The shop set my sway bars at:
front: full stiff
rear: full soft
That is their recommended setting for a street setup. Sounds right to me, more grip in the rear and less likely to oversteer.
I haven't done it yet. I'm looking at buying a set of control arm takeoffs on eBay and then taking the BMR RLCA bearings I have and installing in those, then swapping arms once that is done.How would you rate their work? If I knew they could knock it out in a day, maybe two, I might be entertained to drop my car off when I have a box of parts similar and then spend the time wine tasting
Then again I think most everything I'm collecting can be done by myself although I'm not sure about the springs.
How would you rate their work? If I knew they could knock it out in a day, maybe two, I might be entertained to drop my car off when I have a box of parts similar and then spend the time wine tasting
Then again I think most everything I'm collecting can be done by myself although I'm not sure about the springs.
It's interesting you mention that and thank you for providing that information. I wonder if that explains what I feel sometimes with my car during corners. The car feels like the rear tires are grabbing more when I accelerate hard in a corner. It's almost like I can feel the additional camber trying to pull me around the corner - whereas if I were to take the same corner same speed as before, but completely off the throttle - very different feeling. In the second scenario I would not feel as confident at holding a line.Remember, when you accelerate, the weight transfer to the rear will actually make both sides go more negative, reducing your contact patch as there's no roll.