| In a message dated 05/31/2001 6:51:01 AM Pacific Daylight Time, 
npenney@mde.state.md.us writes:
<< If you look at the dedicated autocross racers, you'll see many of them do 
run quite a bit of negative camber.  Tends to make them rather undrivable on 
the street >>
The negative camber by itself doesn't really driveability that much, what 
makes most dedicated autocross cars more difficult to street drive is the 
toe-out that most rwd cars run.  Tends to make them very twitchy on road 
grooves and such.  I ran -2 degrees of camber for years in my VW autocrosser 
(swing-axle bug, so similar rear suspension too) and just backed off the toe 
setting (to 0") during the off season.  One thing excessive camber will do on 
a street car is wear out the insides of the tires quicker.
Bill J
'68 GT8
///  spitfires@autox.team.net mailing list
///  To unsubscribe send a plain text message to majordomo@autox.team.net
///  with nothing in it but
///
///     unsubscribe spitfires
///
 |