Alignments have never made much sense to me off paper. Because of that, I'm in deep water when I get one done.
I'm having trouble aligning my truck properly for how it's set up. The front wheels look to me as if they are both set with toe in too much, or maybe camber set too low or something. Basically, the top of the tires are visually further outboard than the bottom of the tires. It's a marginal amount of course, but the outside edge of the tires are wearing rapidly in comparison to the inside tread. I'm fairly sure the last shop just set the specs to factory, which is improper for a leveled truck with larger tires.
I built the front end in March/April. Everything is new and quality except for the center link and sway bar itself. I used rare parts for idler/pitman and idler support and their G2 tie rods. I got new moog UCAs with offset bushings so that the truck would have a chance at a decent alignment. New lower control arms bushings are moog, and I got "kryptonite" aka mevotech ttx lower ball joints. Moog end links and small parts. I even did a new rancho steering stabilizer and bilsteins on 4 corners.
The truck is levelled, I bought it that way from the previous owner. It has zone keys which are turned down as much as possible but it still sits pretty high.
The truck is riding on 20x9's, with 2016 take off 265/60r20 GY SRA's.
On Friday I'm going to town fair tire to have another alignment done. The 3rd since February when I bought the truck, and the second since the front end build. I'd like to be able to go there saying, ignore factory specs and use these instead, or some sort of advice that makes sense both on paper and on the road that the tech can use to get a decent alignment.
Can anyone help me get this done right?
Thanks all,
Jack
I'm having trouble aligning my truck properly for how it's set up. The front wheels look to me as if they are both set with toe in too much, or maybe camber set too low or something. Basically, the top of the tires are visually further outboard than the bottom of the tires. It's a marginal amount of course, but the outside edge of the tires are wearing rapidly in comparison to the inside tread. I'm fairly sure the last shop just set the specs to factory, which is improper for a leveled truck with larger tires.
I built the front end in March/April. Everything is new and quality except for the center link and sway bar itself. I used rare parts for idler/pitman and idler support and their G2 tie rods. I got new moog UCAs with offset bushings so that the truck would have a chance at a decent alignment. New lower control arms bushings are moog, and I got "kryptonite" aka mevotech ttx lower ball joints. Moog end links and small parts. I even did a new rancho steering stabilizer and bilsteins on 4 corners.
The truck is levelled, I bought it that way from the previous owner. It has zone keys which are turned down as much as possible but it still sits pretty high.
The truck is riding on 20x9's, with 2016 take off 265/60r20 GY SRA's.
On Friday I'm going to town fair tire to have another alignment done. The 3rd since February when I bought the truck, and the second since the front end build. I'd like to be able to go there saying, ignore factory specs and use these instead, or some sort of advice that makes sense both on paper and on the road that the tech can use to get a decent alignment.
Can anyone help me get this done right?
Thanks all,
Jack