On Sat, 2007-06-02 at 09:41 -0500, Armand Eshleman wrote: > Joe, > Not to be nit picky here but don't you mean caster? > I believe that the strut rods maintain the correct caster. Maybe some > toe might be an added effect, but the tie rods usually control toe in or > out. They are not a means to ADJUST toe, but they have a huge effect on it. When the strut bushings collapse with age, the outer end of the lower arm moves towards the rear of the car, in an arc. As the wheel moves back, the outer tie rod end does too, pulling the front of the tire inward (toe-in) on that side. If both struts wear evenly, and slowly, it's not a big deal (alignment fixes it). With today's crap parts, often one side wears fast, as you drive to turn the wheel to one side to compensate for the increased toe on left or right, and alignment is now assymetrical. After installing new parts, you adjust caster, then camber, (check/adjust both iteratively) then set toe. Rigid strut bushings are drop-dead critical to stable AMC front end alignment, I think more than any other single part. Even badly worn ball joints sit in their socket most of the time. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list