ltdslip
Member
East Coast Suspension in Taren Point ... unfortunately it’s out of the way for most people.
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East Coast Suspension in Taren Point ... unfortunately it’s out of the way for most people.
My experience on tarmac is different.
The softer the tyre the more camber I needed to dial in, the softer tyre with more camber always gave me better times.
It's easy to tell if you don't have enough camber as the tyre will roll over and you will have wear down near where the tread meets the sidewall, to much and the wear will finish on the top of the tyre.
For the track to get it right you need a needle pyrometer, this will tell the real story of where your camber and pressure is at.
Me, for a easy guide to how my tyre is wearing on the street I use the wear marker arrows as a guide, I try to get the same distance between the inner and outer edges. The RE003's seem to like 36 psi cold on the street.
As for toe, with rwd I like 0 f and 0 to a little in at the rear. AWD is 0 f and r.
I have no idea about what works with FWD.
This is typically how I like my cars setup, not overly sprung and typically well dampered.(in saying that I'm currently running FE2 spec with king springs and ultima dampers on my VX with stock sway bars, it's a nice comfy ride which actually handles quite well for what it is).
That's your skewed interpretation.
Well you're not a very good aligner becuase different brands will react to the road differently. This is because all tyres vary on how much they flex under load.As mentioned...Alignment settings are done by reading tyre wear...You have obviously got your settings which work for your application, where for others application, the settings will be different....I have never had to set an alignment to suit a particular brand of tyre....And I have set cars for racing on tarmac, dirt and for normal road use....
Well you're not a very good aligner becuase different brands will react to the road differently. This is because all tyres vary on how much they flex under load.
Yuk I hate toe specs in degrees.The 2017 Chevrolet SS owners manual has instructions for track driving. Cold tyre pressure should be at least 36 lbs and wheel alignment:
Front Alignment Specification
. Caster: 6.0 +/- 1.25 degrees
. Camber: -0.9 +/- 0.1 degrees
. Total or Sum Toe: 0.17 +/- 0.17 degrees
Rear Alignment Specification
. Camber: -0.4 +/- 0.10 degrees
. Total or Sum Toe: 0.2 +/- 0.20 degrees
Thrust Angle: 0 +/- 0.20 degrees
I wonder how this will feel on the street?