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BUCKO |
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Age: 39 Posts: 98 Joined: 17th Feb 2005 Ride: 05 BA MKII XR8, 95 EF gli Wagon Location: Gosford |
which type of camber / castor kit is better for lowered cars? shim or bolt type.
had a bolt type in a stock hight nf fairlane and they went ok, but i was wandering what is better for an ef on lows? cheers bucko
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joolz |
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Go with the shim type as they are cheaper and will not go out of adjustment once set.
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Steady ED |
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Yeah another vote for shims, ratchet/bolt type can go out of alignment if put under stress (skid pan day ).
Plus on lows you will need little to no adjustment anyway.
_________________ ED XR8 Sprint - S-Trim, V500, 249rwkw |
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BUCKO |
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Age: 39 Posts: 98 Joined: 17th Feb 2005 Ride: 05 BA MKII XR8, 95 EF gli Wagon Location: Gosford |
i am running 18x8.5 rims and am starting to scrub the left front. have been able to get away with it as when it was aligned it was just out of spec, but now there is no adjustment left hence the need for a kit.
what costing am i looking at for a shim type? $100-$200? the bolt type cost $400 about 4yrs ago when we put them on the nf. cheers bucko
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MadMatt |
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Shim
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TROYMAN |
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hi guys
well i got the kmac ratchet type and ive had it on both my cars and in the last 3 years its never moved or gone out of adjustment. ive even lost control of the car and mounted a gutter at 100 kms and it was still ok .. after mounting the gutter i took it to a suspension place to see what dammage was done and the only thing that was damaged was the front tyre ... i think that its a myth that they go out of adjustment.. or its just that people dont do the lock nuts up properly??? |
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MadMatt |
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The problem with the ratchet type is that they sieze up. I hated them!
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arm79 |
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Ratchet type...
They are easily adjusted to a point where you can get both sides set to a precise degree. No compromises like the shim type where they may not be able to get the correct thickness shim to make it 100% correct. Plus you can take it to any alignment shop without the worry that they will have shims around to correct an alignment. |
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stomper |
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I would like to use the ratchet type but im going with the shim type seeing as they are cheap and if its done right you will only have to adjust it once.
Im going to put the superlows in and get the camber checked and they will tell me how many degree's its out and ill go home and put the required shims and and get it checked when i get new tyres. Shim kits are cheap too. I got one side 2nd hand for 45 posted. They are only $60-75 per corner new (for the K-Mac Shim type).
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gregor77 |
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I also have the k-mac ratchet type, never had an issue and I drive pretty hard on mountain passes around where I live
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joolz |
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I dont know why some people worry about how easy or hard the shim or ratched type is to adjust. The wheel alignment people are doing it anyways!!!
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BUCKO |
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Age: 39 Posts: 98 Joined: 17th Feb 2005 Ride: 05 BA MKII XR8, 95 EF gli Wagon Location: Gosford |
thanks for all the replys,
which type would give more adjustment. ie shim type only adjust as long as the bolt has room to add more shims. does the ratchet type have anymore room for adjustment or are they about the same. sry for all the questions but i would rather buy something once then have to buy something different a few months later. bucko
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MadMatt |
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joolz wrote: I dont know why some people worry about how easy or hard the shim or ratched type is to adjust. The wheel alignment people are doing it anyways!!!
Cos they wont adjust it or charge extra to free them up.
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joolz |
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Sorry i was actually refering to the shim type... Its a bit harder to adjust than the ratchet type but as a customer its not going to bother us so go for the shim type kit!!
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