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So the new tires are on - my olds wore out very quickly on the inside. I didn't ask for a print out after my last alignment and I think I paid the price - the rear camber was WAY off - over 3 degrees negative.
The new shop seems quite knowledgeable and highly organized - they have all the right porsche tools (another one I checked didn't) and seem to know their way around the car.
So Flash's advice from his ALIGNMENT post coupled with my racing guru's incredulous reaction to the factory-spec zero-degree front camber inspired me to 'go custom' with a little bit of increased front negative camber and see how that feels. Right now the fronts are right on -.80 degrees.
However, the shop could not get the rear camber dialed in - without causing the rear ride height to change. So the got it as close as they could and left the rears at about -2.2. They were reluctant to start raising and lowering the car to get the camber right.
Can someone walk me through how rear ride height is coupled to the camber setting? Ha. This is my golden opportunity to get to know the back of my car a little better.
PS - I've always thought that my car had been lowered in the back - I love the way it looks - but have never checked by measuring. Might be time to do that.
1992 black/tan coupe, window express, koni struts/shocks, 17C2 wheels, guards <acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'><acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'>LSD</acronym></acronym>, pinion fixed, sound system, etc, etc, OCD for sure.
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Thanks for your reply - that's helpful.
The shop did insist on doing rear first, then front - ha - at least they have that right.
Sounds like I should revisit them and have them check the ride height as you say.
How will the rear tires wear with negative camber of just over 2 degrees? How would you say handling is affected?
1992 black/tan coupe, window express, koni struts/shocks, 17C2 wheels, guards <acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'><acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'>LSD</acronym></acronym>, pinion fixed, sound system, etc, etc, OCD for sure.
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thanks - one question I forgot earlier - are there any "camber kits" out there to extend the range and allow lower-slung, properly cambered back ends?
1992 black/tan coupe, window express, koni struts/shocks, 17C2 wheels, guards <acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'><acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'>LSD</acronym></acronym>, pinion fixed, sound system, etc, etc, OCD for sure.
Posts: 433
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Update - it seems torsion bars have sagged a bit on my car over the last 18 years - hard to tell exactly but perhaps as much as 1" relative to the front. Currently the eccentric bolts are set about the middle so presumably there is enough adjustment left in ride height to turn camber in approximately a little less than one degree. (Target is 1.5, currently sitting at 2.2).
The shop has been very accommodating and has agreed to charge me only 1hr labor to re-set the ride height and re-do the alignment - which they'll do tomorrow morning.
Questions:
yeah - I know - I should just get a four-corner coil-over kit and be done with this... [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/dry.gif[/img]
1. Can anyone give me a feel for how much camber will move for a given change in rear ride height? I've got half the trailing arm adjustment left - enough? I don't want to raise the car too much - any issues with setting the ride height this way - or better to re-index the bars?
and a general question
2. I don't think the back is all that low. I should post a pic but the tops of the tires are just about even with the fender rim. I've seen 968's lower than mine. If camber is limited by ride height, how does one keep (camber) alignment correct with a lowered car?
Thanks!
1992 black/tan coupe, window express, koni struts/shocks, 17C2 wheels, guards <acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'><acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'>LSD</acronym></acronym>, pinion fixed, sound system, etc, etc, OCD for sure.