| You probably have the wrong front shocks fitted Greg. Or the wrong 
wishbones.
>>the top of the fronts stick out maybe an inch to 1.5" more than the 
>>bottoms.
Measure the top arm (the shock arm). Assuming the chassis hasn't been 
changed - the top arm should be around 216mm - 218 mm centre to centre on a 
std car with 1 degree positive camber.
There are other shock arms off other sedans - down to around 198mm. Using 
these shorter arms on a Healey can reduce the 1 degree positive camber down 
to over 2 degrees negative camber.
I've never researched longer top arms - but I'm sure they exist.
http://www.myaustinhealey.com/austin_healey_technical_articles.html
Best
Chris
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Greg Lemon" <glemon@neb.rr.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 5:34 AM
Subject: Camber
> After scratching my head and guessing that the outside wear on my front 
> tires
> was due to incorrect toe-in I recently bought new tires and rather than 
> wear
> these out wanted to fix the problem.
>
> It turns out, based upon my level, that I have some pretty significant
> positive camber on the fronts, i.e. the top of the fronts stick out maybe 
> an
> inch to 1.5" more than the bottoms.
>
> Is this a common problem with older Healeys? the front suspension is 
> recently
> rebuilt, nothing seems bent and there is no sign of accident damage.
>
> My first thought was to fix with offset bushes, I asked Dennis Welch about 
> how
> many degrees they could correct for with their offset bushes and just got 
> a
> nebulous answer.  By eyeballing I don't think there would be enough 
> adjustment
> in their bushings to fix my problem.
>
> Any thought on a fix short of re-engineering the front suspension?
>
> Greg Lemon
> 54 BN1
 |