Anyone ever run more than 1/4 (total) rear toe? Opinions?
1/4 inch. Sorry.
I errored and set my rear toe incorrectly. I have believe I set the rear toe to about .315 inches total. This seems to be over one degree. The spec, as best I can surmise, is .45 to .65 degree total. The car feels squirmy, and I am thinking this is the cause. I'll string of up again tomorrow, and report here.
I used to run about that much toe-out on the rear of a Subaru. Triple that much toe-out on the front, to counteract the absurd amount of positive camber that Subaru gave it.
Must have done something right because I could probably have calibrated a T-square on the tire tread at all four corners.
nhmercracer wrote: 1/4 inch. Sorry. I errored and set my rear toe incorrectly. I have believe I set the rear toe to about .315 inches total. This seems to be over one degree. The spec, as best I can surmise, is .45 to .65 degree total. The car feels squirmy, and I am thinking this is the cause. I'll string of up again tomorrow, and report here.
Toe in or out ? Big difference in handling.
Toe in. I was planning on just having it done, but the craziness of this place convinced me to have a go at it myself. ;-)
What car? makes all the difference in the world.
'98 M3 for autocross I used as much as 1/8" / side. On the Radical 1/16" / side is perfect, and I can run a little less, like 3/64", but at 1/32" it's not getting power down out of slow corners as well.
1/4" /side is a metric sh1t-ton of toe in.
That's backwards. It will toe-in more under acceleration. It can be good to have some static toe-in because it will pull towards toe-out under hard braking and if it toes-out enough it will make the car squirrely under hard braking. The better fix for that is stiffer bushings.
Different cars will react differently to toe settings. In most cases, toe in will help make the rear more stable, and toe out will help make a car rotate. I run .5° total rear toe (no idea the inch measurement) on my S2000 to help keep the rear in check. Factory toe settings make it incredibly tail happy.
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