Originally Posted by
sambb
I recently finished my toe alignment plates and gave them a go today. I'd fitted eibach shims shooting for zero toe and to square up my rear cambers. If I survive Bathurst there wont be many fast circuits for a while and then i'll shoot for 2 degrees neg rear camber and 2mm rear toe out.
Because toe measurements in mm's vary depending on what size rims you have or what width you are measuring across on the toe plates (only angular degrees can be used as a constant when comparing toe), from what I can tell there is a fair bit of trigonometry to do to convert your toe plate measurement to a mm toe number for your rim size.
My 600mm plates hold the front and rear tape measures 580mm apart. My total rear toe came in as 1mm wider on the back measurement (F: 1628 vs R: 1629). Assuming both tyres are toe'd in equally for the sake of calculation, you then take that as 0.5mm toe in on each side. If you have 0.5mm laterally along a 580mm length and do school trig: inv Tan of 0.5/580 you get a toe in angle for each side of 0.05 decimal degrees. To convert that into mm terms for a 15in (381mm) rim you go: Tan(0.05) = x/381. x = 0.328mm toe in on each side. Times that by two and I have 0.657mm total toe in on my rear beam. The shims have taken it from +5.5mm toe in to +0.657mm toe in.
And you can feel it. It turns in so much more readily now. I'm glad the calcs bore out what I felt and that it wasn't placebo. By the feel of it I think Gary is dead right. With so much toe in at Wakefield the tail needed to be sliding/tyre slipping to get it to turn with little lifts and brake dabs to help it but now it just WANTS to rotate and rails through. It will be very interesting at 2mm toe out with an extra 0.5 deg of rear camber next time around at Wakefield.
I cross checked this method against the fronts that were set to 3mm toe out 3 weeks ago and it came in at -3.12mm toe out so it looks to be accurate enough.
Of course to make the calcs work you have to halve your total toe, do some calcs and then put the number back into total toe number applicable for your rim size. This final total toe number is correct but it still could be that one side has more and one side has less actual toe and to find that out you'd need to string line or get laser treatment. So i'll get it checked properly to confirm this. But at least now I can eg change out struts, alter ride height, change cambers and be pretty much assured I can toe check it afterwards.
Cant load pics from work but many to come.
Nice geometry there, Pythagoras would be proud
The toe measurements that I suggested you try are at the extremities of the tyre, from memory 205/50/15 A05's are around 590 mm diameter, +/- the width of the tape measure. So your 600 mm toe plates should give a result about the same as I suggested. As usual it's not so much about being 100% spot on accurate but more about repeatability. If it's say 4 mm and it needs more toe out, then we adjust it to 6 mm, ie; it's +2 mm that's relevant, not the 4 or the 6 mm's.
The use of toe out on rear of FWD cars is not understood by many, most wheel alignment shops freak out at the very mention of it. But it's essential if we want the car to rotate around the front. The trick is having the right amount of toe out such that the rear end movement is proportional to the amount of steering input. Unfortunately it's not linear, for tighter corners (more steering lock) we would ideally want more toe out but for higher speed corners (less steering lock) less toe out would be better. Wakefield isn't too tricky, compromise wise, as there's not really a high speed corner, the kink is more a braking zone. Hence, for example, Eastern Creek and Philip Island need a slightly different set up.
Some drivers just don't like the nervousness, instantaneous response, from the rear end so we compromise the set up to keep them comfortable. Although I have been known to sneak more toe out each time they drive it until they complain. For the 12 hour one year I started one driver off at 2 mm toe in for practise as he couldn't even tolerate zero toe. By the time the race came he hadn't noticed that I'd snuck 4 mm of toe out on it.
In regards to individual toe (per wheel) versus overall toe (accross the axle line) using toe plates, what I do is adjust one side at a time. So if it's an overall 4 mm and I need 6 mm, then I adjust one side to get 5 mm. Once I have the overall at 5 mm I then adjust the other side to end up at the 6 mm overall target. This means I only have to string line once every couple of race meetings, unless of course there is some specific reason to do it more often.
Lot's of fun to be had, setting up a race car is a journey, we never reach the destination.
Cheers
Gary
Last edited by Sydneykid; 29-01-2018 at 11:09 AM.
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