Boy, I sure am glad I ditched my stock suspension for tubular rack and pinion coil over. Jeeze Louise.
What makes you think that? The coil over stuff is inferior in every way except for header clearance and oil pan access.
Don't care, I knew that you would jump me, was waiting for it. You always do. My cars drive great on the street without all of the drama.
70's Monte Carlo's were what GM called a high caster suspension they had 4 to 5 degrees caster, GM had to put a shock absorber steering stabilizer to stop the caster shimmy, all GM 4x4 trucks that vintage also had a stabilizer for the same reason. I have seen a lot of Jeeps develop caster shimmy as well. Ever go to drag strip and see a dragster go into caster shimmy when backing up? I am not saying it happens always just that it can be an issue especially as the suspension wears with age. And if you have ever had a vehicle, go into caster shimmy trust me you will always remember it.View attachment 1772492
"More than 4 degrees of caster could cause caster shimmy" ???? I've ran 4 1/2 degrees for about 20 years and have since switched to QA 1 UCAs that allowed 8 degrees. There is no shimmy of any kind. I've never felt anything that could be describes as a shimmy from the caster in anything. Maybe the alignments you did in the 70s were on Bias Ply tires or cheap radials?
I've done it twice in B bodies but the A bodies that I have done it to seem to result in less caster than I could get with the B bodies. Lowered ride height does help though, as shown in published alignment curves.
Good points made here.
What makes you think that? The coil over stuff is inferior in every way except for header clearance and oil pan access.
Nope push a grocery cart fast enough and the wheel will caster shimmy, grocery carts have lots of positive caster.The caster shimmy is generally induced with negative caster.
It does help but you make an excellent point. The self centering is influenced by the steering box by some degree. I'll add though that a tire that is really wide will induce more of the self centering since you can see that large amounts of caster will cause the wheel to take on a bit more negative camber at full left and right. This tilts the tire on it's edge which takes effort to do. That effort means resistance that you as a driver has to overcome with additional steering effort. In other words, wider tires may result in better self centering response.
I'm not a beer drinker or any alcohol, really. I do love a good cheeseburger though!
You know, I never followed the factory method for ride height settings. Yeah, I know....it is the "correct way" but I always adjusted the torsion bar bolts to get the tire reveals as close as possible. By the time an old Mopar gets to me, it has probably had 3-10 owners, maybe even had the front end rebuilt at least once. My red '70 was pretty original when I got it....
You can see the tops of the tire, a 215-70-14 which is listed as being 25.9". The next picture is with a 275-40-18 which measures 26.7"
The tire is about 3/4" taller but you can't see the top of the tire here. Just a guess but the front looks to be at least an inch lower here compared to the picture when the car was green.
Holy crap, that tire is listed as 28.9" ! That is tall.
I don't want to cut the man down. I have learned a lot from him. I agree with him on most matters. The cancellation of the Mopar Action magazine is a terrible loss to many, myself included.
Nope push a grocery cart fast enough and the wheel will caster shimmy, grocery carts have lots of positive caster.
good info on trying to fix caster shimmy https://www.thedieselstop.com/threads/horrific-death-wobble-on-2011-resolved.385754/
Setting the camber with a two foot square.
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View attachment 1772663View attachment 1772664
2. Caster is God
Understand this is my slightly sarcastic opinion that I have of my perception of the many who chase it seems unlimited amounts of caster with little or no concern of the downsides from a handling standpoint. Meaning we agree more than we disagree on this point.Not exactly. From reading other posts, I was led to believe it was the major determinant towards improving self-centering (short of tire width, of course).
Knowing what I’ve experienced since, caster has since become a much lesser, secondary deity.
-Kurt
Also, I make a subtle distinction between handling and driving, which it also seems many in these discussions do not, mainly one being more dynamic and the other more static.
His picture is shown measuring from the rim, tire bulge is irrelevant in that case, I can't see rim runout being a significant factor here if we are using tape measures. A simple spin test visually will indicate if it is enough to be concerned with IMO.While I applaud your initiative and your efforts, I don't see how you can get accurate camber readings by having a framing square resting on the sidewalls of the tires since they will bulge at the bottom. Even resting on the wheel edge does not take into account any wheel runout that might exist. The hub mounted Longacre gauge seems to be a better way to go.
I see I opened a can of worms here. First "driving" is like driving down the road, and the car is self-centering, and the driver is as happy as can be with little or no steering inputs. Handling is when the driver is making steering inputs intentionally, often quickly, to change directions as needed/desired and the car reliably and predictably responds to those inputs.Agreed. Just the word "handling" itself is only a catchall for perceived stability vs. a vehicle's ability to actually follow through on a driver's commanded input, and that alone differs between the street and the track.
Case in point: There are cars out there that grip extremely well through a corner, but they do it with a boat's worth of body roll to transfer weight to the front wheel on the outside of the turn. But they technically handle. On the other end of the spectrum are cars set up to be dead flat in cornering which some owner might perceive as "good handling," but they never transfer weight during cornering and chronically understeer.
-Kurt
When setting up the upper control arms have the rear adjuster turned all the way in and leave it there. The front adjuster will be used to adjust your camber plus or minus.
I don't see how you can get accurate camber readings by having a framing square resting on the sidewalls of the tires since they will bulge at the bottom. Even resting on the wheel edge does not take into account any wheel runout that might exist.
How is that? Don't many machines also reference directly off the rim flange?Once set up on the alignment machine the sensors take in account for any runout.