Originally posted by SQ13
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Camber/Caster Plates - Pros and Cons?
Collapse
X
-
I have replaced every single part on the camber plates except the metal. Even the gold bushings, went from the ones that look like they have a countersink to ones that have a step. I bought all the parts from GC, should have bought the bearings from BMW as they were cheaper though.Originally posted by fattycharged View Post
Assuming you have replaced the BMW bearing? If not, you should also replace the bushings in the street plates. $100 for both of those from GC. I think it's odd you'd have any noise, I have never heard a peep out of mine running V3's, which has the progressive spring and stock perch as well.



Last edited by R1pilot; 05-04-2023, 11:51 AM.
Comment
-
Well no wonder these things are denting strut towers, look how small they are compared to stock!Originally posted by George Hill View Post
That is good info, often time I hear people say my car has been together for X years and its fine, then find out they only drive it 1k miles a year, lol.
I wonder if the stock springs helped or the strut brace acted like a reinforcement?
Here are pics of:
BMW reinforcement plate
Stock Non-M mount
Stock M3 mount
GC Camber plate
Vorshlag Camber plate
TMS Camber plate
Comment
-
Look at the photos I posted from underneath of the GC plate indentation into the reinforcement plate. GC says they design them at an angle and I'm not sure that is helpful for the towers...Originally posted by cobra View Post
Well no wonder these things are denting strut towers, look how small they are compared to stock!
Comment
-
Are you referring to some other thread somewhere? Two members posted photos of cracked towers from GC plates (couldn’t find yours, I may be doing something wrong on my phone) and they’re on both inner and outer sides of the towers. That might imply that the GC plates are not unevenly distributing load..Originally posted by fattycharged View Post
Look at the photos I posted from underneath of the GC plate indentation into the reinforcement plate. GC says they design them at an angle and I'm not sure that is helpful for the towers...‘02 332iT / 6 | ‘70 Jaguar XJ6 electric conversion
Comment
-
I don't see his post either... But I posted (2) strut towers that were cracked. One was a Vorshlag CP and the other was a stock Non-M strut mount.Originally posted by Bry5on View Post
Are you referring to some other thread somewhere? Two members posted photos of cracked towers from GC plates (couldn’t find yours, I may be doing something wrong on my phone) and they’re on both inner and outer sides of the towers. That might imply that the GC plates are not unevenly distributing load..
To be clear I do not think this is a problem specific to ONE manufacturer that makes this style. I think it is when cars are driven hard or have increased spring rates on the front end WITHOUT reinforcement plates.
I think any of these with reinforcement plates are sufficient for 99% of the population. BUT I do also think you can get away without plates using the TMS CP as they are slightly larger in OD but the entire surface sits against the tower vs the others that is just a ring.'09 HP2S, '12 R12GSA, '00 Black 323iT, '02 Alpine 325iT (Track Wagon), '02 Alpine 330iT
Instagram @HillPerformanceBimmers
Email to [email protected]
- Likes 1
Comment
-
I’ve always wondered how accurate the ‘degrees’ markers are on the tops of these plates, have you had an alignment to confirm what they’re reading is actually what the camber is set to?Originally posted by R1pilot View Post
Sorry for the late reply.
I have almost 100k miles on the camber plates. About 80k of those are with the factory struts/springs and the rest on Ohlins R&T.
I am running the factory strut bar on the car.




Last edited by Ramps; 05-05-2023, 06:11 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by George Hill View Post
I don't see his post either... But I posted (2) strut towers that were cracked. One was a Vorshlag CP and the other was a stock Non-M strut mount.
To be clear I do not think this is a problem specific to ONE manufacturer that makes this style. I think it is when cars are driven hard or have increased spring rates on the front end WITHOUT reinforcement plates.
I think any of these with reinforcement plates are sufficient for 99% of the population. BUT I do also think you can get away without plates using the TMS CP as they are slightly larger in OD but the entire surface sits against the tower vs the others that is just a ring.2 Photos
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Good catch! I *think* I looked at that and dismissed as og to the shock, but dont really remember. I just received the parts from 3dm and will install next weekend, will check that while I do so.Originally posted by Bry5on View PostWhat’s all that marring on the top of your shock shaft? Is that from contacting another piece of hardware? Looks like that could easily be a source of noise if that’s from a riding condition.
I am using the factory drop hats, so I doubt its rubbing, but will check. I bought the shocks new also, so I can rule out any preexisting damage on them.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Not very. If you look closely I have them marked for when I used to track the car and would move them.Originally posted by Ramps View Post
I’ve always wondered how accurate the ‘degrees’ markers are on the tops of these plates, have you had an alignment to confirm what they’re reading is actually what the camber is set to?
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Update -
I installed a new set of GC Race camber plates (with reinforcement plates just in case) and I can compare the driving experience. I went with race plates because it's the biggest change from stock in terms of stiffness.
-There is definitely a more direct feeling to the road, but I wouldn't consider it harshness. In fact, I like the way it feels now that the damping is so direct. It communicates what the tires are doing and feels very connected (in a good way!). On a bigger/sharper edged bump you feel more but again it's nothing crazy.
-The steering feels more precise.
-The whole system is completely silent with no rattles or squeaks (yet?)
-With the minimum camber setting, there's still more camber than stock, and I can barely run stock caster (because the mounting bolts hit. These plates are clearly designed for a very aggressive setup with 3-4 degrees of camber and are at the limit if trying to do a stock alignment.
One important thing is that the camber plate is over an inch shorter than stock, which means it's now running in a different section of travel and the bump/droop ratio has changed (more bump, less droop). I had to add a thick packer to prevent the wheel from hitting the fender on bottom-out.
Overall, I like them but a less adjustable variant is probably better for me personally, and maybe something that is only 1/2" shorter would be ideal for me at almost stock ride height.
- Likes 2
Comment
-
I ran with GC Race plates for a couple of years on my DD before I switched to the Street plates for ease of maintenance. I couldn't tell the difference in harshness between the two. I ended up switching to Street plates after the spherical bearing on the Race plates wore out and got all loose and noisy after the repeated bashing of CA roads for 2 years.Originally posted by cobra View PostUpdate -
I installed a new set of GC Race camber plates (with reinforcement plates just in case) and I can compare the driving experience. I went with race plates because it's the biggest change from stock in terms of stiffness.
-There is definitely a more direct feeling to the road, but I wouldn't consider it harshness. In fact, I like the way it feels now that the damping is so direct. It communicates what the tires are doing and feels very connected (in a good way!). On a bigger/sharper edged bump you feel more but again it's nothing crazy.
-The steering feels more precise.
-The whole system is completely silent with no rattles or squeaks (yet?)
-With the minimum camber setting, there's still more camber than stock, and I can barely run stock caster (because the mounting bolts hit. These plates are clearly designed for a very aggressive setup with 3-4 degrees of camber and are at the limit if trying to do a stock alignment.
One important thing is that the camber plate is over an inch shorter than stock, which means it's now running in a different section of travel and the bump/droop ratio has changed (more bump, less droop). I had to add a thick packer to prevent the wheel from hitting the fender on bottom-out.
Overall, I like them but a less adjustable variant is probably better for me personally, and maybe something that is only 1/2" shorter would be ideal for me at almost stock ride height."your BMW has how many miles!?"
2003 M3 coupe - Imolarot/Black 6 M/T - JRZ - Ground Control - Volk Racing - Karbonius - SuperSprint - Recaro - Schroth
1989 325i sedan - track project coming soon!
2007 GX470
build/journal
ig: @zzyzx85
Comment

Comment