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Moderator: Micka
Mudrat wrote:How badly does the castor correction bush's affect suspension travel and what is involved in rotating the swivel housings? Is this as easy job, or do they have to be machined or modified?
Cheers
To correct castor correctly you shold do this.
1: bend radias arms in 2 places.
Bush65 wrote:I don't think you will have a problem with a 2" lift. In any case do the lift and see how it drives before going any further with castor correction.
tim wrote:Or you can relocate the radius arm mounts on the axle housing so you sort out the castor angle and the diff pinion angle. Currently getting an axle housing modded like this here in the UK.
Anybody got any experience of doing this?
Tim
Have you got any more pics? I need to do this to fit the 80 series diffs.HSV Rangie wrote:I bent mine myself.
at that time I had access to a forge.
But you can achieve the same result using a large heating tip on an oxy acet torch.
THis is what my radias arm loks like now.
Michael.
If you get you wheel alignment checked, they will be able to tell you what your current castor angle is. Standard is 3 deg.Michele wrote:I resurrect this thread for a min just to be sure of
a 3 degree rotation for 2" lift...is it right?
I have to say I'm much used to the truck after the lift,so I could put up with it and not to mess the chrome balls.
But,in case,should I measure the gap between the bumpstop and the spring mount before and compare it with a standard one to be 100% sure of the real amount of lift?
Then re-check for the degree rotation needed?
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Another (un)happy idea I'm playing with is to fit johnny joints instead of the front chassis bushing so they automatically compensate whichever the lift...
Uhm...
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