M series - tracking / camber / caster

M series - tracking / camber / caster

Author
Discussion

Finn2500m14

Original Poster:

49 posts

97 months

Monday 18th September 2017
quotequote all
Hi everyone,

Once i have fitted fresh suspension i will be looking to have the car setup properly.

I have the original specs but are camber and caster actually adjustable or are they determined by the chassis.

If that is the case i presume its just tracking the front end.

Thanks, Finn

plasticpig72

1,647 posts

156 months

Monday 18th September 2017
quotequote all
I was just starting to think about this on my 3000M.
I am going to try 30" tow in .
For the camber i know you can adjust it but i don't know what is best, maybe 1° negative.
Perhaps too much negative camber the car turns in too quick + heavy steering.
I wonder what the experts think
Alan

Dollyman1850

6,319 posts

257 months

Monday 18th September 2017
quotequote all
Same as for pretty much every TVR built...

Front... Little bit of neg camber and Little bit of toe in.
Rear.... Little bit of neg Camber and either straight ahead or a tidgey little bit of toe in

biggrin

N.

Finn2500m14

Original Poster:

49 posts

97 months

Monday 18th September 2017
quotequote all
Yeah, sounds good to me 😀!! Can't wait to have a properly handling.

plasticpig72

1,647 posts

156 months

Tuesday 19th September 2017
quotequote all
A little bit of negative camber is what 1°
Alan

anonymous-user

61 months

Tuesday 19th September 2017
quotequote all
plasticpig72 said:
A little bit of negative camber is what 1°
Alan
I'd go 1.5 deg neg front and 1 on the back.

Should feel very stable at that and not wanting to change directions if you hit a leaf in the road. smile

plasticpig72

1,647 posts

156 months

Thursday 21st September 2017
quotequote all
Just measured the camber and it's 1.7 ° neg each side.
Does more neg camber make the steering heavier. If i reduced it to 1.5° neg would the steering be lighter.
Alan

TwinKam

3,170 posts

102 months

Thursday 21st September 2017
quotequote all
I would very much doubt that anyone could notice any difference for such a small change, especially on a bushed-suspension road car, that's if it's even possible to adjust/measure that increment accurately.
A psi or two in the front tyres might make more difference!...

plasticpig72

1,647 posts

156 months

Thursday 21st September 2017
quotequote all
Maybe i'll change it to 1° neg then to see
Alan

GAjon

3,804 posts

220 months

Thursday 21st September 2017
quotequote all
I tried increasing the camber on mine once, didn't feel any noticeable change(although I was preoccupied with a gearbox problem on the day) all I did was ruin a set of fronts on one track day at Aintree.

For mine ( and don't try this at home because I runs different size tyre, rims, solid bushes, ride heights, etc) I have the fronts and rears set up right using a spirit level on the rims with the car with no one in it.
I run the rears parallel, no toe in or out.
And the fronts I have 1.5mm toe in a side measuring back to front of the rims.

phillpot

17,279 posts

190 months

Thursday 21st September 2017
quotequote all
Dollyman1850 said:
Same as for pretty much every TVR built...

Front... Little bit of neg camber and Little bit of toe in.
Rear.... Little bit of neg Camber and either straight ahead or a tidgey little bit of toe in

.
my kind of measurements thumbup