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#1 | ||
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: I live at Devens, one run at a time
Posts: 454
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For both of you I'd expect a "0" toe front end might want to follow truck ruts in the road, more pronounced the larger (and/or grippier) the tire. This can make highway lane changes a little "interesting", and if the roads in your area are highly worn you may be happier with some front toe-in although total 1/8" looks like a lot to a guy who runs front toe-out ![]() Bear in mind the behavior of each car at the limits is a tuning exercise that includes tire choice, size(s) and pressures, shock settings and alignment. Each car and driver are different in their specific setup needs and there really is a huge amount of range-of-behavior in these few parameters. Whatever the setup, in an emergency situation, one end is likely to break loose before the other. It seemed to me like the factory settings are designed to make the car plow like a tractor, unless you romp the gas in which case it spins like a top. In any case when going "off book" with anything automotive you are changing your safety envelope so to speak and need to do some testing in a controlled environment to be sure you've got what you meant and/or are ready for the consequences before you are faced with an old racing adage, "Never run out of talent and ideas at the same time". I highly recommend an autocross or street-survival type class for anybody doing anything more than getting groceries and parking in ideal weather. And that goes for anyone likely to be driving a given car. No need to worry about the competition aspect of an autocross, think of it as a full minute of emergency maneuvers as that's exactly what it amounts to. It should take a solid event to a few for anyone to be able to find the limits of their car in several situations, and learn what to do about each, and that is really useful to know before faced with an actual emergency... I spent >25 years driving all manner of hotted up cars before I actually learned what works and how to drive. In fact, the first couple seasons of my autocross career were spent un-learning what I thought I knew... One last thought, there is nothing more educational than an autocross in the rain. It makes the limits much more accessible and all the lessons are applicable to dry as well, but of course at different speeds. YMMV, - Jeff Last edited by batchman; 06-18-2015 at 12:47 PM. |
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#2 |
Join Date: May 2015
Location: Benicia, CA
Posts: 27
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My experience: Did the following 4 new Sumotomo Summer only tires.New Upper ball joints. Front end alignment to advanced street specs. Result: Almost immediately I noticed a huge positive difference in the handling. Things just seemed tighter and smoother. The car tracks great and has absolutely no rattle or vibration with speed up to 110mph. Steering was effortless and positive. I'm a newbie so take my lesson for what its worth.
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#3 | |
![]() ![]() Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: South Dakota/California
Posts: 3,816
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Advanced Street Front Toe 0 inch Camber .25 deg negative Caster 5-7 deg positive Rear Toe In 1/8 inch Camber .50 deg negative
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Clickable links ![]() On Iphone Touchable Links -Solutions- LT5 Modifications/Rebuild Tricks Low Mileage ZR-1 Restoration 1990 Corvette (L98) Modifications LT5 Eliminated Systems LT5 Added Systems LT5/ZR-1 Fluids 1995 LT5 SPECIFIC TOP END REBUILD TRICKS |
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#4 |
Join Date: May 2015
Location: Benicia, CA
Posts: 27
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Yes those are the ones. I got them from the link in an earlier post.
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