I dunno, I have the Sportlines on my car, which are about a 2-2.25" drop and
hardly had any problems with uneven wear, even though I hardly ever rotate
my tires. I honestly wouldn't waste the time unless you have the car slammed
and your're noticing some serious wear problems. Even then, it's likely an
inflation issue.

Fred

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, June 10, 2002 5:32 PM
To: Ken
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CRX: Camber kit question


Ken- I'm just wondering whether this is really a major concern or is the
shop
feeding me a little FUD (fear, uncertainty, doubt) to make a sale (they
quoted
like $550 for camber kits installed!?  So with the camber being *close* to 1
degree off (actually slightly less than that), is this something I should
put
up with and not drop $XXX into fixing?

I'm also wondering if I did the camber kit, would the handling go back to
the
sweet feel Honda is famous for- right now it has a very slight "crab-walk"
(best way I can describe it) feel due to the negative camber.


-George

P.S. -Got slammed this week and won't have the MSD ignition in until
Saturday!

> Although I haven't bought the Ingalls kit yet, I have done quite a bit of
> research on it because I am also contemplating the install. With your
> Prokit springs, you have a drop of 1.2 inches in the front and 1 inch in
> the rear which will equate to about a 1+- negative camber for your car. If
> you look at the ingalls web site, they show a rear kit part#3893 which is
> basically a longer grade 8 bolt than what we have on our cars now, and
some
> spacer washers. All that for $13.50 per wheel is a bit pricey. You could
> probably go to a specialty fastener place and buy a grade 8 bolt and some
> spacer washers for a fraction of the price. Just pull out the bolt that
> holds the rear upper control arm to the body of the car and bring it with
> you to the fastener shop and get the same thread pitch but just a longer
> bolt. The other option for the rear is the replacement arm part# 3890, but
> since your only correcting for only about 1+-degrees camber, the cheapest
> solution is to just to opt for the shimming route. Keeping in mind that in
> the ingalls kit, they only recomment shimming as far as 0.75 degrees. I
> suppose for those people who have adjustable coil-overs, they might want
to
> consider the 3890 route due to the greater flexibility to accomodate their
> different height adjustments.
>
> The front kit part# 3570 looks like a good fit for your rex. I had looked
> at the front kit at a local shop and it looks like a good quality product.
>
> They both look pretty easy to install as well.
>
> My only reason for hesitating for getting the ingalls camber kit is that
my
> wheels have an offset of 38, and  the tires are 195/50/15 and it has been
> lowered about 2 inches, so if i correct for about a 2 degrees, the tires
> may rub. Damn it, I didn't know better at the time but I should have
bought
> a 45 or 42 offset wheel. Oh well. My mistake.
>
> By the way George, seeing that you have your MSD installed, do you really
> notice anything different in your car? Just wanted to keep it in mind,
just
> in case I ever had any ignition problems and may need to do some
> replacements or upgrades. Thanks.
>
> Ken
> 90si
>
>
> At 07:30 PM 10/06/2002 +0000, you wrote:
> >I had a long talk with the guys at the tire shop and they of course
mentioned
> >I really needed a camber kit for proper wear & handling.  I've got the
KYB
> >AGX's on Eibach Pro Kit for my '89 DX-hybrid.  Has anyone installed the
> >Ingalls camber kit?  Any recommendations, oh suspension gurus?
> >
> >
> >
> >George
> >'89 DX-hybrid-D16Z6, 120k miles
> >"MSD, suspension work, even more fun to
> >drive"
>




Reply via email to