Wheel alignment, or to be exact, rear wheel alignment. I'm struggling with this one at the moment and thought I'd start a topic to get a few comments from you guys. I don't mind if you say I'm doing it wrong, I'm being crazy or simply worrying about nothing, all comments are welcome.
Ok, some background. I normally adjust my front tracking either from measuring the front & rear of the tyres or by using a device called the "Gunsons Trackmaster", which is basically a movable platform that you roll the car over and it tells you how many degrees you have of toe-in or out. I've used this for front & rear but the problem I'm finding is getting accurate repeatable results so I resorted to the string square and measuring method. I have the car set up as in the first photo, strings taught and the front & rear white bars are identical length and set to the same height.
I've taken measurements using a digital gauge as shown in the second photo and would guess I'm reasonably consistant. My first measurements are to centralise the string square around the car by getting equal dimensions across the front & rear axles taken from the wheel centres because this is a TC with different front & rear tracks so front & rear measurements are slightly different, but equal across the car.
I then measure front & rear from each wheel rim and in theory that should give the toe-in or out against the centre line of the car. In practice I never get the steering wheel exactly centered but the total front toe-in has been repeatable, so I'm not bothered by that. (should I be ? )
What's bugging me is the amount of shims I'm having to put in to get the 1.5 to 3.0 mm toe-in on an individual wheel (makes 3mm - 6mm total toe-in). On one side I have 8mm of shims, on the other I've got 12mm, which seems a heck of a lot to me. The chassis is a Lotus replacement one, the rear arms are also replacements and I can't honestly see any damage to either component, so this discrepancy in shimming is bugging me. I honestly expected to find both sides the same to within 1-2 mm and I didn't really expect to use 12mm on one side.
So I guess the question is, has anyone else found the same thing on their car ?
How do you racers go on setting up your alignments and secondly, do you work to the 3-6mm range in the manual ? As I said at the start, all comments welcome - TIA.
Brian