Added note to my comments about the strut rod eliminators, I got to thinking that maybe this still isn't the true answer........ Theory...... if the front suspension is set up to have little to no bump steer input, throughout the full travel up and down, they must be moving in a relatively perfectly vertical up and down motion, with very little to none forward to back or inward and outward at the top or bottom wheel movement. If there is no forward to back give in a strut rod eliminator, when the suspension hits full jounce or rebound, because the length of the strut rod is inflexible, and should in fact increase as the suspension moves out of aligned ride height, the wheel will move back, changing castor settings and creating bump steer. Now this effect should be minimal if the up and down travel of the wheel is minimal like on a relatively smooth road course. does that make sense? Armand _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list