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Mixed use alignment? (Attn:Hotrodz, Rusty)
So been a while posting but I got a secondary vehicle so now making some changes with the Z and doing suspension arms and also some custom valved powertrix ultralites. I still plan do street drive the car so I’m trying to get some feedback on alignment thoughts. I know the go to for track is a -2 to -3 front with a -1.8 rear but I think that’s going to be a bit much front for any sustained street use. So then the question is if I plan to keep the front around -1.5 to 1.75 should I then put the rears closer to -1.25ish? I know factory has the rears more negative than front but then I see a lot of the Z (and GTR) change that ratio for aggressive use as you get more corner exit traction.
So keep rears 1.8 and just have less front or adjust the rear to keep a more negative front bias? |
I've been using these setting for a while.
Front: Camber -2.2 Caster 6.5 Toe 1/16" in Rear: Camber -1.8 Toe 1/16" in. Been thinking on going to this because I don't track like I used too. Front: Camber -1.8 Caster 6.5 Toe 1/16" Rear Camber -1.5 Toe 1/16" |
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For toe, I'd suggest 0 on the front, and just slightly closed toe for the rear. This proved to help return the steering wheel faster when going out the corner while keeping the rear neutral. |
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Stock rear doesn't allow less than -2° camber.
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http://www.the370z.com/brakes-suspen...ent-specs.html |
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And to answer above - if you go out of OEM specs, you will need not just camber arms, but toe arms as well. Aftermarket camber arms will allow more or less aggresive camber, but will pull the toe setting out of alignment and just using the stock eccentric screw to adjust it will not be enough. |
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Full setup will be powertrix ultralites lowered 1-1.25”, z1 forged upper arms with poly bushings, z1 rear camber arms with poly bushings, spc toe bolts and Stillen sway bars. Stock rays sports with either 10mm spacers (currently) or 20mm once I test for them. Looking for a setup that be good for hpde days a few times a year and then not destroy the tires on the street. |
The more rear camber you have the less tire meaningfully contacting the road for straight line acceleration.
As soon as you get in the car, your weight adds more rear camber, then plant your foot to the floor and the rearward weight distribution adds even more. Pretty soon you only have have the first 4" of the inside of the tire really biting the pavement. *Facetiously speaking about the 4" measurement but you get the idea. |
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While mine is by no means a track car, nor even a auto X ride I take it to a road race shop to make sure it's "treated with respect", done "right" with me present, and I pay dearly lol. I noticed the major amount of rear camber change when the tech. pulls down on the rear cross bracing while making adjustments! :eek: |
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https://youtu.be/20rltqTKeVE?si=5dMuIp0LF9Jx-q2A Recorded this a while back to visualize the camber gain Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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