it'll help - a bit of trigonometry - wheel radius ~ Rmm, stock camber on rear is c1 (in degrees)... say you go to c2 deg neg, then by a bit of simple trigonometry and rearranging equations, we have:
C = R x [sin(c2) - sin(c1)]
where:
C = new amount of clearance (in horizontal direction);
R = wheel radius;
c2 = new camber setting;
c1 = old camber setting;
so if your wheel radius (inc tyre) is 295mm, and you start with say 1 degree camber, and you increase to 2.5 degrees, you will get an extra 7.7mm clearance at the corner of your tyre, so long as the camber change rotates about the centre of the hub. NOTE that this is extra clearance ontop of what you already had (or didnt have, if its rubbing) so if its really fouling by heaps it might still rub.
but it'll probably change the high speed hard cornering handling of the car a fair bit, and would certainly wear the insides of wider tyres a bit more.
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