They are not at all usefull for adjusting between street and track setups. Set it once and leave it.
Why do you say that? I changed mine almost every week without any problems.
I do my own alignments and they're plenty accurate. If you carefully make several marks on the hat and tower you can get it very, very close. Certainly well within the noise limit of any alignment machine, whether it's your guy's classic setup, my homebrewed kit, or a modern laser system.
Adjusting camber and caster at the same time is a non-issue. For street I dialed camber to reasonable (~1*) levels, with whatever caster that got me. For track I compromised a little camber for more caster, since the circular adjustment mechanism means you can get a lot of both by setting the bolt at a 45* angle to the vehicle centerline. The tricky thing to deal with is that you need to change your toe, or at least be aware of it. I wasn't changing my toe too much, so I went from slight toe-out on the street to slight toe-in on the track. For big events I dialed in some toe-out and then put it back when I was done racing. Toe is very easy to set and reset, you just count turns.
As we all know, a properly aligned AutoX car is dangerous to drive on the street past 45mph.
As we all know, a properly aligned AutoX car is dangerous to drive on the street past 45mph.
That is completely false.
I would not say completely false but a car setup for AutoX will have toe out instead of toe in. The toe out will cause the car to be more unstable at highway speeds and requires more attention from the driver. Hence it is not as safe to drive with an alignment specific for AutoX. A road race setup will not use toe out because increased turn in is not required.
Also, maybe your roads are better where you live but here any setup beyond factory specs and street tires and the car will wander through every groove in the road.
Those who don't know what they are talking about should not speak. Toe-in on the front wheels will cause a vehicle to be less stable than toe-out. Alignments are what I do both to OEM specs and for track use.
Thanks for the input guys i just wanted to make sure that if i did or didnt install the camber plates it wouldnt chew up the inner wall of my tires at an ungodly rate.
As we all know, a properly aligned AutoX car is dangerous to drive on the street past 45mph.
They are not at all usefull[sic] for adjusting between street and track setups. Set it once and leave it.
Struts have a coil spring that is mounted to the shock at and then installed on the car.
Shocks are independant of the spring. Such as vehicles that have leaf springs. Shocks can be replaced without removing the spring. Struts cannot.
An agile alignment is less stable. It is extremely rare that an autocross alignment is actually wild enough to cause any sort of issue on the street. And certainly
is just baloney. That was a very broad statement, and not only is it not universally true, it's almost universally false.
Like this statement:
And this one:
There are only a few things I don't tolerate, but spitting out garbage as fact is one of them. Trying to cover up and twist what you originally said is just as bad. Drop it, and don't do it again.