How could the length of the axle change the camber, when the hub is pressed on to the end? The upright may sit at a different angle, but the angle of the roadwheel is always 90 degrees off of the angle the axle comes out of the differential (Which, ideally, would be 0). This is also why I think the real main reason our cars lean left after a "pilot-only" drive is because the tire can't "Scrub" back in and relax the spring because the bottom of the tire would have to drag along the road about 1/2" to restore the car to its real resting height. I tried this on my alignment rack at work and the car doesn't lean left when I park it on the turntables.
Luke '71 and '74 both off the road right now DAMMIT Parkhill, Ontario > the uprights never changed across all model years. > the long axles cam in in 71 on spits but the swing spring > did not come in till 73. > Yes... the longer axle with the shorter spring created a bit more camber > as the upright would have been leaning in a bit more with the shorter > spring. > BUT..there were two different specs for how far in you were suppose to drive > the oil shield onto the axle. Why?... I'm not sure since the hubs didn't > change either *** http://www.team.net/the-local *** Your messages not reaching the list? Check out http://www.team.net/posting.html *** unsubscribe/change address requests to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or try *** http://www.team.net/cgi-bin/majorcool *** http://www.team.net/mailman/listinfo *** Archives at http://www.team.net/archive *** Edit your replies!
