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Oh that would be more than brave on post-winter PA roads.Just checked, my front c/o's are 1-1/4" below bottom.
Oh that would be more than brave on post-winter PA roads.Just checked, my front c/o's are 1-1/4" below bottom.
Back of the brakes. Between the drums and the beam axle.Also, how do you get more neg camber in the rear? Where do the shims go?
Back of the brakes. Between the drums and the beam axle.
Sorry I haven't offered more info guys. Really busy at work this week. I'll clean the car and get full pics soon.
The rear wheel hubs are connected to the beam axle by 4 bolts. If you sandwich alignment shims between them you can change the toe or camber (depending on where you put the shim). I had to increase the rear camber slightly to avoid rubbing the letters off the tires on PA roads. This is how the car sits as of last weekend but I'm still playing with it...
Small increases in negative camber increase lateral grip. To turn that into an advantage on the rear of the Sonic I will need an anti-sway bar (or maybe DDM's brace). Until then the car will continue to understeer in all but the most wild weight tranfer scenarios. And I'm less than willing to scandy flick the car around tight corners.
Tire wear will be affected (inside edge of tread) but I have a habit of trashing the outside edge of tires with hard cornering before a camber induced wear pattern is a factor. If anything it may help me even out my treadwear.
Small increases in negative camber increase lateral grip. To turn that into an advantage on the rear of the Sonic I will need an anti-sway bar (or maybe DDM's brace). Until then the car will continue to understeer in all but the most wild weight tranfer scenarios. And I'm less than willing to scandy flick the car around tight corners.
Tire wear will be affected (inside edge of tread) but I have a habit of trashing the outside edge of tires with hard cornering before a camber induced wear pattern is a factor. If anything it may help me even out my treadwear.