Best place for alignment work.

Best place for alignment work.

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Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Monday 3rd July 2006
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I want to get my tracking done, but want someone who actually knows about steering/geometry to be doing it, not someone who just points the steering wheel straight and adjusts the TRE's until the computer says "yes"

My concern is, if the steering rack is say 4% over on it's travel, then a given degree of ackerman is already active (ie, one wheel turned more than the other) and so adjusting the TRE's at that point is meaning you have non-symmetric steering!?

I'm not sure why my steering wheel is slightly to the left (5 deg or so) on a flat smooth road, and I'm not sure the tracking is 100% either.

Main dealer, tyre place, specialist tyre place, independant specialist?

Any help or recommendations much appreciated!

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Monday 3rd July 2006
quotequote all
leorest said:
Unless you get a cast iron good personal recommendation you would probably be better off doing it yourself.
Flat bit of ground, fishing line, axle stands, el cheapo laser spirit level, steel rule, tape measure, plumb line, metal plates, grease, and some schoolboy mathematics. With all this and a bit of research on the web you should be able to do full four wheel alignment with high accuracy, just not as quickly as with the professional kit.


As always I probably could do it DIY with some time and patience, however a this time of year spending TLC time with the car doing such jobs is not really an option.

I was just after a good trusted place I could slip £££ to do it right and leave me knowing they have done a job to a level I would be happy with!

Considering most places I go today with so called professionals who do work to a lower level of quality that I do myself is why I'm asking for a good decent place really.


Might have a stab myself. Anyone know how to check the steering rack itself is centred 100% before locking it in place and straightening the steering wheel itself and adjusting the TRE's?

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Monday 3rd July 2006
quotequote all
leorest said:
Mr Whippy said:
... Anyone know how to check the steering rack itself is centred 100% before locking it in place and straightening the steering wheel itself and adjusting the TRE's?
I believe some racks have marks to show where they are centred and some even have holes you can stick a bolt or pin into to lock them at actual designed centre.


Thanks for the link above. Not sure how his little jig works to be honest, unless thats built to exact standards to start with

I've seen a few camber gauges around relatively cheap but not sure on using those.

As far as I know camber is not adjustable to any degree on my current car, and the rear geometry is static to the trailing arms so the only real adjustment is toe.

My main concern ultimately though is making sure I have symettric steering so the ackerman and so bump steer, turn camber and so on are all consistent in bends left or right... I've got this feeling it's out but I can't be sure, but the new TRE on the nearside along with a wheel not 100% straight is telling me it's not 100%

I'll continue to ask around and see what methods are employed at a few places I know, just don't want to pay some monkeys to set up my car with guessed toe settings off-rack centre

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Tuesday 4th July 2006
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leorest said:

I had not thought of the rack centring error as a problem. Though it obviously exists, is it significant enough to worry about on a road(or even track day) car? I'm not expressing an opinion I'm just asking the question!


I'm asking the question too.

Imagine I turn 1/4 turn left, then take off the wheel, re-centre it, and then adjust the TRE's to point the wheels dead ahead.

Yes, a bit silly, the TRE's would probably be at their extents of adjustment, but the steering would in theory be noticeably unsymmetric.
Ackerman on the E46 M3 for instance is ~ 1.15x, so after 1.5 turns from centre the outside wheel has turned 1.15x more than the inside. over 1/4 of a turn that is maybe 2.5%.

So as you turn in 1/4 of a turn to the right say (90 deg) the left wheel thinks it already a bit turned left, so is turning faster than the right hand wheel (because it has to, to make up the ackerman).


Yeah, I'm going to extremes, and maybe it's something I shouldn't worry about, it's just a mental concern at how sloppy TRE replacement time and time again, along with just removing wheel and re-fitting it to straighten it, can introduce errors?

Will have a look through the Haynes manual for my car and see if there is any instructions on centring the wheel to the rack etc...

If anyone knows if TRE/rack/steering wheel true centre error can cause significant problems with ackerman effects on toe (and I guess camber as one strut rotates slightly quicker one way than the other if an error exists, so KPI effects on camber will obviously be in action too) then let us know

Cheers

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Tuesday 4th July 2006
quotequote all
leorest said:
This may help.
www.eland.org.uk/steer_intro.html
I know it's based on three wheels but it should give the principals




Cheers

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Wednesday 5th July 2006
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Jaguarnut said:
I've had some fun (!) with front wheel alignment. After having had a lot of new bushes and mounts fitted, I found I needed a new steering rack. I then found that the old one had been set up completly wrong. After many splinters in fingers scratching head, I realised that the solution was quite simple. Firstly, jack up the front of the car and support on axle stands, ensuring that the tyres are clear of the ground. Turn the steering wheel full to the steering stop and note its position (find some reference point). Then count how many turns it takes to the opposite full lock. It is likely to be some odd figure rather than a convenient 3 turns lock to lock. Having got that meusurement, devide it by 2. For simplicity then, the mid point would be say 1.5 turns from full lock on either side. Now in my case, I found the steering wheel position to be way off, and I had to remove the airbag to centre the steering wheel on the shaft. (Easy on my car but you need to know what to do with airbags). Once refitted, try it again. You should now find that at the mid-point of the rack travel between full lock left and full lock right, your steering wheel should now be in the straight ahead position. This should negate the effects of Ackerman! Now, lower car and take it for a test drive carefully. You may then find that to drive in a straight line, your steering wheel is off to one side slightly, or significantly. At this point, get the vehicle on a 4 wheel laser alignment rig, and ensure the operator locks the steering wheel in your new found straight ahead position. The system will now show the operator how much to adjust the wheel alignment on which wheel and by what amount. It worked perfectly on my Jaguar and it will go down a straight road, steering wheel straight ahead, and maintain a straight line without me adjusting it. Now that is good as my particular model is notorious for tramlining! Simple but effective!!!


That sounds a good way of doing it, thanks.

If my rack is central then everything else from that must be.

Can't do this with the gti6 model though, as it has a right hand lock cut-off at about 90 degree's from the end so the wheel doesn't rub the gearbox
Fortunately my car has symmetric steering (I hope ) and so your method should work a treat.

Odd that cars don't have some kind of effective "TDC" on the rack or steering wheel hub.

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Wednesday 5th July 2006
quotequote all
leorest said:
Just thinking about the centring issue a bit more and it occurs to me that the important thing is the lateral distance between the inboard end of the track rod link, and the suspension pickup points, must be the same on both sides. When the rack is "centred" obviously.

In other words the centre of the rack is on the chassis centreline.


Well, the chassis centreline isn't the best datum for that either really, or so the links posted above suggest

I think the idea is to find the centre of the rack by using it's extents, this then assumes that the ackerman effects are not present because as you say the tre links and the suspension pickup points are symmetrical at each side (we hope anyway)...

It is a mine field. This is kind of why I expected there to be professionals out there who just knew all this and could get your car 100% in half an hour with fancy equipment and good knowledge and £50 or so lighter...

Seems this area of alignment is one of those "lets sweep that fact under the carpet" kind of things because it opens up about 20 more cans of worms

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Thursday 6th July 2006
quotequote all
If the rack is central AND the suspension geometry pickup points are symmetrical about the rack centre point, then I guess we can assume ackerman effects will be symmetric one way or the other.

My concern is if the rack is say 1cm off to one side, so the TRE's are adjusted to keep it straight, then the ackerman effect will be in force at dead ahead. You may well take a left hand turn and the ackerman zero's it's effect **before** starting to turn the outside wheel more, leaving you with screwed geometry.

Is that effect negligible or not I wonder? Do race teams even worry about the slight offset?

Surely there must be a decent alignment shop out there

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Thursday 6th July 2006
quotequote all
combemarshal said:
If your steering wheel is not straight when going dead ahead the answer isn't just to take it off and centre it yourself, there must be another underlying problem that put it out.


Yep, it's had a new TRE on the nearside and the wheel isn't straight. Thats worrying because either the steering rack is out by say 5 deg at the steering wheel, and the TRE's are adjusted to be straight, or the wheel was removed and re-fitted badly, and the TRE/rack is spot on, or a combination of both!

Hence the quandary

Dave

Edited by Mr Whippy on Thursday 6th July 20:20

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Friday 7th July 2006
quotequote all
leorest said:
Was it straight before the TRE wore out?


Dunno, previous owner

Copper slip and new "looking" TRE were the give away on a W plate car with 72k on.

Dave

Mr Whippy

Original Poster:

29,125 posts

243 months

Thursday 15th November 2007
quotequote all
Well I took the steering wheel off recently to fit a leather one (mmmm), so I re-set it to the right a bit but then it was more right than it was left frown

So I'm guessing that where it was is right (looked like it hadn't been off when I took it off), so must be down to the TRE adjustments.

Since tyre wear is pretty sweet across the patches at the front I think I'll wind a few turns off one side and add a few to the other side and see how it evens out biggrin

That said will be fitting new front dampers sooner than later so may just get down to that Sunside place in Halifax after to get it checked 100% smile

Dave