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You’re going to get a wide range of answers there. There are members on this forum who would swear up and down they can notice a dramatic handling and acceleration differences with a 50 lb weight reduction. There are others who can barely tell a 500 lb difference.
I personally made far too many suspension changes at the same time to be able to tell you the true difference. But in general 1 degree of camber is noticeable, even if it doesn’t give you any true “advantage” in a street context. I think it’d be of particular help for lowered cars since macpherson strut suspensions tend to become more positive the lower you get.
You’re going to get a wide range of answers there. There are members on this forum who would swear up and down they can notice a dramatic handling and acceleration differences with a 50 lb weight reduction. There are others who can barely tell a 500 lb difference.
I personally made far too many suspension changes at the same time to be able to tell you the true difference. But in general 1 degree of camber is noticeable, even if it doesn’t give you any true “advantage” in a street context. I think it’d be of particular help for lowered cars since macpherson strut suspensions tend to become more positive the lower you get.
Thanks.
I am preparing to move from Eibach coilovers to TC Kline. I would prefer to install them with E36 upper strut mounts rather than camber plates. I am trying to determine if the CSL parts would help facilitate this and/or provide any other worthwhile advantages. On the other hand, it is a street car and I don't usually run more than about 1.5 degrees of negative camber anyway. Perhaps the $600 would be better spent elsewhere?
CSL front wheels are each 12.7mm wider plus 3mm more aggressive offset. Neither combo comes to 10mm. Width of wheel wouldn't create a wider track at the hub, but you'd have 6.3mm more wheel at the outer edge. 3mm offset x 2 = 6mm, not 10mm.
Or is it that each hub is 2mm further out, plus 3mm offset on each = 10mm?
According to Volke who sounds like he knows what he's talking about-
That's a myth due to the CSL having 10 mm wider track width up front. 6mm comes from the wheels being 3mm lower offset. The other 4mm is from the change in control arm angle at the lower ride height.
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