what kind of aalignment do i get?
i have heard of normal and sports? is there really such thing?
Passat 1.8T K04 | Audi A3 1.8T | Bora 4Motion
By tracking I mean having the front wheels set parallel (or as per the book if you have that info).
I have never come across a road car, run with enough negative camber to wear out the tyres. I may be wrong but haven't seen it in 15 years of owning GTIs. I had a couple of degrees -ve on my 2 litre MK2 and drove it for 4 years as my daily driver (20K miles a year) without having this happen.
My Ibiza has just been done after I replaced some bushes. I knew it was out as the front right tyre was well gone on the inside. It was toeing in by a 1/4 inch on that side. Meaning that the fronts of the 2 wheels were 1/4 closer than the rears. This is loads and accounts for the tread wear.
The wheels also had positive camber on both sides.
All the above has been adjusted out and now I can drive round roundabouts without sounding like Starsky and Hutch!! ;0
I would advise that you have a 4 wheel alignment carried out. This also checks that the rear wheels point the front too.
Whiteline are no longer in Minto - they are now in the central coast.
Camber pins are a good investment, I run four in my Nissan and it holds like a gun![]()
-DIDZ
This is a good article about camber bolt kits. They use kmac stuff which requires the bolt hole to be drilled out however their theory is that they use the same size thickness bolt as standard so str isnt compromised.
Noltec + whiteline use a thinner eccentric bolt with a teardrop shaped middle that does the same job. I chose this since its easier
http://autospeed.drive.com.au/cms/article.html?&A=2358
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