alignment question
. Anyways. Took the car in cause the front tires had some saw toothing on the inner edges, but the rears were fine. Car drove straight, not issues. They didnt give the before specs, like I asked for, but I did get the after specs. The wife did the leg work for me cause I was at work and she said the steering wheel wasnt straight. sure enough, I get home and drive it. Its off to the left. Doesnt seem to pull that much, maybe a bit to the right, but road around here are not the best. The issue I have is the thrust angle. The rear toe says -.20 on the left and .16 on the right, and gives me a thrust angle of -.18.
They claim it is not fixable. I know the rear is not adjustable, but they could counteract it with some toe adjustment correct? The spec is -.15 to .15, so its only .3 adjustment. I looked under the car and the trailing arms look to be in good shape. thats the only thing I could think of that would throw off the toe. anyone else? could he just not of bounced the car and it was giving a false reading?
Typically when a 4 wheel alignment is done, the front toe IS set in reference to the thrust angle. This isnt something you would see on a printout though, and also think about how the only way to center the steering wheel is literally by EYE. So it can easily be messed up. I'd just take it back and tell them to do it again til its right.
I read the specs for setting alignment on the car, and it said it needs a full tank of gas. so i filled it up and they are supposed to correct the steering wheel tomorrow.
The thrust angle is used as a reference for the alignment so rear toe/thrust angle (on a solid axle) wont make the car pull or make the tires wear. It could make the car track funny but i doubt you'd be able to tell while driving. Total toe in the rear could affect tire wear but its static on solid axles.
I read the specs for setting alignment on the car, and it said it needs a full tank of gas. so i filled it up and they are supposed to correct the steering wheel tomorrow.
I know what you mean about the toe out on one side, should be the same as the toe in on the other side, but I'd say any variation could be attributed to how the "targets" are clamped on the wheels of the car.
I've always aligned my cars with a half tank of gas....
.05 right to .32 left and -.45 right. Would adding a few gallons of gas actually effect it that much? the caster and camber stayed pretty much the same.
after they adjusted it, it now has -.20 thrust angle. The car now drives with the steering wheel straight up and down. It may track slightly to the right, but its hard for these cars to track straight with even slight grooves in the road.
I'm gonna chalk up my issues with firestone yesterday to newbie errors. The wife told me the guy asked her yesterday for the locking lug nut key. She asked him why he would need it cause the tires dont come off for an alignment. He said they just might need it to make adjustments.
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Remember pressure rises with temperature, so the closer you push that tire to its limit (44psi cold), with speed it will be even closer or even surpass that limit and THAT is putting you at risk of a blowout.
I'm definitely not saying do top speed runs at 28 psi though. The pressures you run are probably good for speed but could possibly cause unnecessay wear on the tires under normal driving.
Last edited by spy2520; Jun 26, 2011 at 05:00 PM.



