Caster changes won't affect handling very much. Camber changes do though. Looking at the suspension from the front towards the rear, the upper arm and lower arm are horizontal (or should be) and parallel when static. At the outer, knuckle (wheel) end, the arm joints (lower ball joint, upper trunnion/ball joint) are in line vertically (or very close; the static camber range around +1 to -1 degrees more or less). However, the inner (chassis) end of the pivots are NOT vertically aligned; the upper arm is shorter than the lower arm, so the pivot is closer to the tire at the top and the lower arm is underneath, in the x-member. When you see this, the rest is easy: when an arm moves, the longer arm draws a bigger circle than the short arm. They're of course connected by the steering knuckle, so they move together. So when the tire goes up (car goes down) the TOP of the tire moves IN and the camber (tire verticality) goes negative (tire tilts in towards the car). Body roll makes things more complicated. On some cars (early American) the soft springs and no anti-roll bars makes the body tilt comically to the left when you make a right turn, but in that case the camber goes very negative (tire tilts inward at the top outward at the bottom, it's like putting your foot out) so it handles far better than you'd expect (roll center is crazy high etc so it's no sports car). But some cars (my Hornet) and esp. those with stiff springs, or with sufficient torque, the roll geometry is such that the camber goes POSITIVE or doesn't change and the car "snowplows" through turns. Getting cars to handle right is a PITA. The changing strut rod "length" (the radius it follows) also changes (increases) toe-in, and that would have a bigger effect than camber in turns. it also twists the lower arm, which is why the lower arm bushing is pressed into ONE SIDE of the arm only, it floats in hte other half of the arm. The forces there are fairly small and it's fail-safe, hardly anyone knows about that detail and it never matters; it was John Elle who pointed it out in this list some years back. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://list.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list-amc-list.com/attachments/20100129/748ab45d/attachment.htm> _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com