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- Apr 13, 2012
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I think that I've been fooled.
I've used the same alignment shop for my Charger and my truck for years. Each time, I've told them I want as much caster as is possible. With the Charger, I want .75 degree of negative camber and 1/8" toe in.
The last time I had it aligned was February 2023. It was a custom alignment so I had to pay by the hour, to the tune of $160. I got no printout but the man said he got 5.5 degrees of caster on the right and 5.0 on the left. .75 negative camber and 1/8" toe in. I really wanted an actual printout for my records.
The car drove fine but it hasn't had the amount of return to center that I'd expect with this much caster.
Last month I went on a 900 mile car show road trip and once I was back home, I decided to raise the car up an inch to help avoid scraping the exhaust in the future. I know how sensitive these suspensions are to alignment settings with changes in ride height...
Just read the chart. From the zero ride height, it has 1.17 degrees of caster, zero camber and .059 of toe in.
Going up 1 inch changes that to .672 of negative caster, .020 negative camber and .081 of toe in.
It looks like the 1 inch rise, I lost 1/2 a degree of caster. Okay, make a note of that.
I've had some squealing on hard right turns, something that this car has never done. At home, I put a 2 foot level on the front tires. The right still is negative camber as determined by the bubble showing the wheel out of plumb, leaning in at the top.
The left side though....How or why is it leaning out at the top? Positive camber? I never asked for that.
The alignment cam bolts: When I assemble a front end, I always set the rearmost cam bolt all the way IN toward the engine. The front cam bolt is set all the way OUT toward the fender. This gets maximum caster. Right now, it looks like both the left and right rear cam bolts are adjusted to the middle of their range. There is no way that a stock UCA even with offset bushings can get 5 degrees of caster with the cam bolts set this way.
I'm going to align the car myself. Chris Birdsong can do it, so can I. He put out a video on how he did it:
He has no sophisticated equipment, just good old common sense and a few tools.
Before I delve into this, I want to change to aftermarket upper control arms to gain some caster over the stock UCAs with offset bushings.
What do you think of these?
How about these?
Or these:
I like patronizing sponsors of this site . There is a thread though where a member bought UCAs from PST and the front tube of the arm didn't line up with the upper bumpstop. All of these vendors seem to claim more caster. Since I raised the car 1 inch, I want to maximize the amount of caster that I can get. I do NOT want the heim joint units, I don't want stuff that is going to rattle and squeak.
I've used the same alignment shop for my Charger and my truck for years. Each time, I've told them I want as much caster as is possible. With the Charger, I want .75 degree of negative camber and 1/8" toe in.
The last time I had it aligned was February 2023. It was a custom alignment so I had to pay by the hour, to the tune of $160. I got no printout but the man said he got 5.5 degrees of caster on the right and 5.0 on the left. .75 negative camber and 1/8" toe in. I really wanted an actual printout for my records.
The car drove fine but it hasn't had the amount of return to center that I'd expect with this much caster.
Last month I went on a 900 mile car show road trip and once I was back home, I decided to raise the car up an inch to help avoid scraping the exhaust in the future. I know how sensitive these suspensions are to alignment settings with changes in ride height...
Just read the chart. From the zero ride height, it has 1.17 degrees of caster, zero camber and .059 of toe in.
Going up 1 inch changes that to .672 of negative caster, .020 negative camber and .081 of toe in.
It looks like the 1 inch rise, I lost 1/2 a degree of caster. Okay, make a note of that.
I've had some squealing on hard right turns, something that this car has never done. At home, I put a 2 foot level on the front tires. The right still is negative camber as determined by the bubble showing the wheel out of plumb, leaning in at the top.
The left side though....How or why is it leaning out at the top? Positive camber? I never asked for that.
The alignment cam bolts: When I assemble a front end, I always set the rearmost cam bolt all the way IN toward the engine. The front cam bolt is set all the way OUT toward the fender. This gets maximum caster. Right now, it looks like both the left and right rear cam bolts are adjusted to the middle of their range. There is no way that a stock UCA even with offset bushings can get 5 degrees of caster with the cam bolts set this way.
I'm going to align the car myself. Chris Birdsong can do it, so can I. He put out a video on how he did it:
He has no sophisticated equipment, just good old common sense and a few tools.
Before I delve into this, I want to change to aftermarket upper control arms to gain some caster over the stock UCAs with offset bushings.
What do you think of these?
How about these?
Or these:
I like patronizing sponsors of this site . There is a thread though where a member bought UCAs from PST and the front tube of the arm didn't line up with the upper bumpstop. All of these vendors seem to claim more caster. Since I raised the car 1 inch, I want to maximize the amount of caster that I can get. I do NOT want the heim joint units, I don't want stuff that is going to rattle and squeak.