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Front vs rear Camber
Is having more negative camber up front than in the rear, better for handling?
Or vice versa? |
To achieve neutral handling in our cars you're going to want more negative camber in the front than the rear.
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Rear spec is -1.8 deg I have changed my fronts to -1.9 deg with SPL camber arms. Additionally, i have added another degree of Caster to the front alignment, too. You will need the extra front camber if you do track days or aggressive turns. :tup: |
With the SPL upper arms. My specs are;
Front camber -2. Caster +7 Toe +1/16" Rear camber -1.75. Toe +1/16" Pure track car. You numbers will be greater, depending on track, tire, etc. |
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Do you think -2 front camber would over kill for weekend/spirited driving? I'm at -1.25 front and -1.4 rear but would like to make it a bit more aggressive without wearing out too excessively.
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Great. Thanks Mr Rusty :tiphat:
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I have them set at -2.5 front and -2.0 rear.
Stock toe and +6 front caster. It helps using all tire surface under high g-force turns. I found the above setting near perfect for my use (weekend drives, autox and trackdays). As gomer said, it neutralize the handling, the car comes originally biased toward understeer. I don't use it a lot on streets so I don't worry about wear. |
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You have coilovers as well and it's pretty simple to lower to gain camber for events. With my stock arms I've calculated and measured after about a 1/2-5/8" drop is good for about .75 degree camber. Not sure if it's a linear increase though but if you spend a little time and get a cheap camber bubble gauge you can set ride height to gain some camber, write down the spec and then you'll have a quick easy dual setup. I did mine and the reset and checked with a true hunter alignment machine and specs were all within less than .1 of each other. |
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