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		|  11-07-2009, 06:40 AM | #1 |  
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				The official alignment spec and review thread
			 
 
			I wanted to start this thread so we have a place to post up our alignment numbers and how we feel that alignment has affected handling. Please refrain from posting anything EXCEPT your alignment specs and your "review" of each alignment. When you add / update your review of a specific alignment, please edit your original post. If you get a new alignment, please post a new reply to this thread. Mods, please delete replies that are off-topic - it would be great to have an exhaustive list of alignment settings for various purposes (autox, tire life, etc.).
				__________________1999 Carrera 4 • Aero kit • 4" UD Pulley
 My Corvette doesn't leak oil... it sweats horsepower.
 
				 Last edited by sd_boxster; 11-07-2009 at 06:45 AM.
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		|  11-07-2009, 06:44 AM | #2 |  
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			Black Forest did my alignment yesterday. Most significant change was max front camber. Rather than changing a bunch of settings at once (toe, caster, etc.), we'll start with one variable, see how that works, and try something else next time.
 Front camber: -1.25
 Caster: 6
 Toe: 3.5
 Total Toe: 1/16"
 
 Rear camber: -1.75
 Toe: 9
 Total Toe: 1/8"
 
 Review to come after tomorrow's AX.
 
				__________________1999 Carrera 4 • Aero kit • 4" UD Pulley
 My Corvette doesn't leak oil... it sweats horsepower.
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		|  11-07-2009, 08:51 AM | #3 |  
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				Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Orlando, FL 
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			Factory Alignment and the wear has been very even so far. I've got the stock 17" wheels wrapped in PS2's , I drive this car daily in a "spirited" fashion most of the time and autox it 9-12 a year. 
Front 
Toe: (L) +0.03 (R) +0.03 
Camber: (L) -0.41 (R) +0.30 
Caster: (L) +7.64 (R) +7.63
 
Rear 
Toe: (L) +0.07 (R) +0.06 
Camber: (L) -1.68 (R) -1.68
 
Factory recommended settings for reference:
    
				__________________kabel
 
 Orlando - 99 BMW  M Coupe (autocross toy), '11 Mazdaspeed 3 (dog hauler), '99 10AE Miata (the new daily driver)
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		|  11-07-2009, 02:08 PM | #4 |  
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			Autocross about a dozen events a year, the rest just driving to work ect.   I wanted more negative camber up front to reduce understeer but can't get more than half a degree without camber plates.  I like the setup but feel it could be better with more front camber as it still pushes in slow, tight turns but not as much as it did. 
 Front:
 Camber: -.5
 Toe: 0
 Caster: 7.5
 
 Rear:
 Camber: -1.5
 Toe: .06 degrees in
 
				 Last edited by Adam; 11-07-2009 at 02:12 PM.
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		|  07-28-2010, 07:55 PM | #5 |  
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			Got my alignment done today at Roger Kraus Racing. I was able to get -1.0 deg with little twist on the strut mount. My car is a '99 with stock US suspensions. 
Here is my alignment spec: 
Front 
Camber: -1.0 deg 
Toe: 0
 
Rear 
Camber: -1.5 deg 
Toe: 0
 
The car is much more spirited now. It handles the way a sport car suppose to be, no more understeer, turn-in is quick and willing to rotate in middle of corner. I love the way it handle now!     |  
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		|  07-29-2010, 04:41 PM | #6 |  
	| Rennzenn 
				 
				Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Virginia 
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				Smart Strings is the way to go!
			 
 
			I'm fortunate to have one of the Flying Lizard's team mechanics operating his own shop here in Charlottesville VA (Here's the plug: Werkstatt) Using his stuff, we did the Smart Strings alignment on a set of scales. We set the toe for both front and rear at an absolute true zero. Front camber was set at -3.2; rear was at - 3.6.
 The car has never driven more true!
 It's primarily an AX car, but I do drive it on fun runs/PCA events, and the occasional Boxster-to-work fix.
 BTW, K-sport coilovers w/ monoball mounts; tarrett rear toe links
 
				 Last edited by j.fro; 07-29-2010 at 04:44 PM.
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		|  07-30-2010, 06:55 AM | #7 |  
	| Track rat 
				 
				Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Southern ID 
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			Frontcamber= -0.7 deg
 toe= 0
 max castor
 
 Rear
 camber= -1.5 deg
 toe= 0
 
 The car runs about 20 track days/year plus lots of spirited weekend canyon carving.  Very few highway miles.  It still has mild understeer which can mostly be overcome by apexing later.  The car tracks straight and true under all conditions up to 135 mph.  Noticeably more wear to the outer half of the tires especially in front.  It would benefit by more neg. camber on track days but I am limited by current BSX class rules.
 
				__________________2009 Cayman 2.9L PDK (with a few tweaks)
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		|  03-11-2012, 03:28 PM | #8 |  
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			I am not sure how helpful this thread is.  The numbers are all over the place and no one has come back in to state what worked and what needed to be changed.  Heck, one car has this as it's set up:"Camber: (L) -0.41 (R) +0.30"
 
 Why on God's green Earth would you want negative camber on one side and positive camber on the other side unless you are running on a circle track (and even then, it would be the other way around in America)?
 
 I am still looking for some good advice on an AutoX set up on a '98 Boxster on stock suspension.
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		|  03-11-2012, 03:44 PM | #9 |  
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				Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Alta Loma, CA 
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	Quote: 
	
		| and no one has come back in to state what worked and what needed to be changed |  
um.. you know why? kickass alignments are done to YOUR DRIVING style not somebody else.
 
You are asking the impossible. I have hundreds and hundreds of setup notes.. each driver may like something different. It comes down to what YOU like.. not what somebody "told you"
 
also.. stock? really? you are limited to about 90% of what was posted above!!
 
Are you new to this? Do you have 20+ years of driving experience? There is NO magic setup that will compensate for a slow driver!!    
B
		 
				__________________Engine Builds, Transmission Builds, Engine Conversions, Suspension Installs, Suspension Tuning, Driver Coaching, Data Acquisition, Video, SCCA/PCA/POC/NASA/GRAND AM/ALMS.
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		|  03-11-2012, 03:51 PM | #10 |  
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			Ready? start here:
 max negative on the front, then match the side that comes in with the least amount
 
 run 2mm total toe out in the front and 2mm total toe in on the rear
 
 on the rear, run .5 less camber in the rear than you manage to get out of the front.
 
 example: end up with -.5 in the front, run 0.00 in the rear, end up with -1.0 in the front? run -.5 in the rear
 
 Is that a lot of toe? yes, but you are probably on worn ass out 100k mile rubber suspension bushings that flex all over the place under braking and turn in... which requires us to run more static toe than normal (for autoX)
 
 You know from all 1million + posts that running autoX on stock suspension does nothing but eat the sh_t out of front tires do to lack of negative camber achieved by the front struts...
 
 Good luck..
 
				__________________Engine Builds, Transmission Builds, Engine Conversions, Suspension Installs, Suspension Tuning, Driver Coaching, Data Acquisition, Video, SCCA/PCA/POC/NASA/GRAND AM/ALMS.
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		|  03-11-2012, 04:27 PM | #11 |  
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				Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: Kuna Idaho 
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Brad Roberts  Ready? start here:
 max negative on the front, then match the side that comes in with the least amount
 
 run 2mm total toe out in the front and 2mm total toe in on the rear
 
 on the rear, run .5 less camber in the rear than you manage to get out of the front.
 
 example: end up with -.5 in the front, run 0.00 in the rear, end up with -1.0 in the front? run -.5 in the rear
 
 Is that a lot of toe? yes, but you are probably on worn ass out 100k mile rubber suspension bushings that flex all over the place under braking and turn in... which requires us to run more static toe than normal (for autoX)
 
 You know from all 1million + posts that running autoX on stock suspension does nothing but eat the sh_t out of front tires do to lack of negative camber achieved by the front struts...
 
 Good luck..
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Thanks.  I have 28,700 miles on the car, but yes, it is sitting on 14+ year old bushings.  I will be headed into the alignment shop in a couple of weeks and have taken notes.  Thanks again.
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		|  03-11-2012, 04:34 PM | #12 |  
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				Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: Kuna Idaho 
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Brad Roberts  um.. you know why? kickass alignments are done to YOUR DRIVING style not somebody else.
 You are asking the impossible. I have hundreds and hundreds of setup notes.. each driver may like something different. It comes down to what YOU like.. not what somebody "told you"
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I was looking for a good starting point since the OEM set up (the one presently on the car I believe) doesn't have the turn in that I am use to.
 
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Brad Roberts  also.. stock? really? you are limited to about 90% of what was posted above!! |  
Yes stock.  I have run SM2/SSM/EM in a SCed S2000 for years and switched over to a CR-Z in HS last year.  I have a new (to me) Boxster and would like to run in CS this year to see where I stand against the M3's that have been winning that class for years here.
 
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Brad Roberts  Are you new to this? Do you have 20+ years of driving experience? There is NO magic setup that will compensate for a slow driver!!    
B |  
Yes I do, 30 actually and 10 autoXing.  With the S2000, people found that the UK alignment specs made a HUGE difference in the way the car responded.  I was hoping that there was a setting for the Boxster that would do the same.
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		|  03-11-2012, 08:10 PM | #13 |  
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			oh.. thank you    
Then you do know what you are doing    
Ping me offline.. I'll tell you how to take 90% of the slop out of the stock suspension and not replace a single part    and still be legal for SCCA stock classes.
 
B
		
				__________________Engine Builds, Transmission Builds, Engine Conversions, Suspension Installs, Suspension Tuning, Driver Coaching, Data Acquisition, Video, SCCA/PCA/POC/NASA/GRAND AM/ALMS.
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		|  03-11-2012, 08:15 PM | #14 |  
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				Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Alta Loma, CA 
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			Marlin,
 will you attend the National Tour in Washington? I'll have two cars there this year, probably 3 cars at San Diego National and 4-5 at Lincoln Nationals.
 
 
 B
 
				__________________Engine Builds, Transmission Builds, Engine Conversions, Suspension Installs, Suspension Tuning, Driver Coaching, Data Acquisition, Video, SCCA/PCA/POC/NASA/GRAND AM/ALMS.
 We have worked with amateur and professional drivers for over 26 years. In house machinist, In house fabrication. Our cars, our parts, our engines, our transmission's run nationwide at events every weekend. We work side by side with industry names developing parts.
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		|  06-27-2013, 06:52 AM | #15 |  
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				Join Date: Jun 2012 Location: Frederick MD 
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			Hi Brad, 
 My 2002 S (58K) is going in for an alignment this week and I would really appreciate your insight regarding the comment quoted below!
 
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Brad Roberts  Ping me offline.. I'll tell you how to take 90% of the slop out of the stock suspension and not replace a single part    and still be legal for SCCA stock classes.
 
B | 
				 Last edited by shadrach74; 06-27-2013 at 06:58 AM.
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		|  06-27-2013, 11:38 AM | #16 |  
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				Join Date: Feb 2013 Location: Land of naught 
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			I don't think Brad's been around for a while now. I've been wondering about that same issue for about the last week! Short of pressing out the metal locating inserts and having sleeves machined, I can't think of anything. Does anyone know if the rubber is solid from one side to the other???
		 
 
				__________________Death is certain, life is not.
 
				 Last edited by woodsman; 06-27-2013 at 11:53 AM.
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