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Wheel alignment question
Wheel alignment question
Can toe-in or toe-out affect only one front tyre, or does it affect both by the same amount and on the same side of the tyre, i.e both worn inside edge or both worn outside edge?
you'd assume that it'd affect both - but if just one side is out then the compensation you'd be doing at the steering wheel would wear the bent side more... but that'd only happen with a bent housing etc. if the tie-rod is out of adjustment then you should wear both evenly as the tierod purely holds the wheels in alignment.
sound stupid - but have you checked tyre pressures match between both?
sound stupid - but have you checked tyre pressures match between both?
The worst thing about censorship is ███████.
Alien, that is what I thought. You would expect that to keep the car going straight the wheels would split the difference and side-slip equally.
Here isa the whole story. The LHS wheel has far more negative camber than the RHS (which I have to fix soon) , but the RHS tyre is severely worn on the inside, and the LHS is worn very evenly. This would suggest that camber is certainly not the problem. That only leaves toe-out. I just cannot figure why toe-out would affect one side only.
The LHS has roughly 7 degrees negative camber. RHS is only about 2 or 3 degrees.
Tyre pressures are even and checked regularly. There is rarely a need to adjust pressures as both hold pressure well.
Here isa the whole story. The LHS wheel has far more negative camber than the RHS (which I have to fix soon) , but the RHS tyre is severely worn on the inside, and the LHS is worn very evenly. This would suggest that camber is certainly not the problem. That only leaves toe-out. I just cannot figure why toe-out would affect one side only.
The LHS has roughly 7 degrees negative camber. RHS is only about 2 or 3 degrees.
Tyre pressures are even and checked regularly. There is rarely a need to adjust pressures as both hold pressure well.
Kingpin bearings perhaps ? What is the steering like ?
Below is how to roughly check for toe in/out, stolen from here :
http://www.trail-gear.com/tech/sas-inst ... tions.html
Below is how to roughly check for toe in/out, stolen from here :
http://www.trail-gear.com/tech/sas-inst ... tions.html
Place the steering wheel so that it is in the center of it's movement left to right. Bolt on the pitman arm using the stock nut and washer. Connect the left side of the steering Drag Link to the the front most hole in the right side steering arm. Tie rod ends should have approximately 3 three exposed threads. Do not expose more than 1/2 of the tie rod end threads as this can cause an unsafe driving condition.
With the truck on the ground, set the tow-in of the front tires at 1/8". This is done by turning the Tie Rod with the jam nuts loose. Measure the widest part of the tire at the front and rear of the tire. Adjust the Tie Rod until the front is 1/8" narrower than the rear.
Once completed turn the steering wheel all the way left and right. Verify that the wheels turn the same amount left and right. If not, adjust the length of the drag link or adjust the position of the pitman arm.
Tighten the pitman nut to 130 ft/lbs. Tighten the jam nuts on the Tie Rod and Drag Link using an adjustable wrench.
http://www.trail-gear.com/tech/sas-inst ... 18-600.jpg
'92 Rodeo - VR V6, T700, 31's
'89 Zook - 4 inch lift, 32's, 5.14 gears, RUF, F&R Lockrights, Rear Disconnect, Falcon/Landcruiser PS
'89 Zook - 4 inch lift, 32's, 5.14 gears, RUF, F&R Lockrights, Rear Disconnect, Falcon/Landcruiser PS
i'd check for a bent diff housing.... if one wheel is cambered more than the other, it would be dragging you off to one side so you'd be constantly correcting for that and hence wearing the tyre unevenly.
roll a coin along your desk - watch what happens as soon as the coin leans a bit - it does a big arc and eventually falls over... apply that to 2 coins (your wheels) and have one leaning and one straight - to counter the leaning wheel the straight one must turn half the distance of the lean, which places more weight on one side of the tyre than the other and causes uneven wear.
roll a coin along your desk - watch what happens as soon as the coin leans a bit - it does a big arc and eventually falls over... apply that to 2 coins (your wheels) and have one leaning and one straight - to counter the leaning wheel the straight one must turn half the distance of the lean, which places more weight on one side of the tyre than the other and causes uneven wear.
The worst thing about censorship is ███████.
I got under there yesterday, and it is now about 1 or 2 deg. on both sides. The camber bolt was loose on one side, and had rotated. Having said that, that side tyre is worn even, so probably has not been loose for long. The neg. camber is just visible to the eye now. Looks sane again.
Still can't explain wear on one side only though. See what happens now.
Still can't explain wear on one side only though. See what happens now.
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