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Originally posted by liquid00meth@May 23 2004, 08:53 PM
Camber alone causes uneven wear, especially on your drive tires if you have an especially heavy foot (because the tire sits with an uneven load).
If you can possibly argue to me how toe alone could possibly cause uneven wear, I'd be all ears
Originally posted by pissedoffsol@May 23 2004, 03:36 PM
toe-
\ /
if your tires are sitting liek that, what hits? the bottom most inner part gets dragged instead of rolling forward.
Originally posted by liquid00meth+May 23 2004, 05:53 PM-->pissedoffsol@May 23 2004, 03:36 PM
toe-
\ /
if your tires are sitting liek that, what hits? the bottom most inner part gets dragged instead of rolling forward.
yeah I suppose if the tire dragged itself to the point of inducing camber on the tire. Otherwise, the toe is a different axis than the camber. The tire should still sit flat. I guess if it were exaggerated enough you could counteract the effect by having camber on the wheels, so when the cars moving the induced camber and purposely offset camber cancel out.
Originally posted by liquid00meth+May 23 2004, 06:53 PM-->pissedoffsol@May 23 2004, 03:36 PM
toe-
\ /
if your tires are sitting liek that, what hits? the bottom most inner part gets dragged instead of rolling forward.
yeah I suppose if the tire dragged itself to the point of inducing camber on the tire. Otherwise, the toe is a different axis than the camber. The tire should still sit flat. I guess if it were exaggerated enough you could counteract the effect by having camber on the wheels, so when the cars moving the induced camber and purposely offset camber cancel out.