Above Forum Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bora rear camber

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Bora rear camber

    To you all Bora and MI owner, when you lower your car did you have to put a shim at the rear to correct the camber. I just change fit a lower springs on my car and had them align, the mechanic said, the both align and he didn’t have to do anything at the rear but it moves from 1.5 to 2.8 positive cambers. I am worried that this could eat up my tires within 2 months of driving or is this ok.

    cheers
    Last edited by revhead1016; 03-09-2012, 09:40 PM. Reason: correction
    2009 Tiguan TDI and 2007 Passat TDI

  • #2
    You mean negative camber right..

    I just left the camber but whether you want to correct it or not is up to you. My personal way of thinking is that it's a fwd biased AWD system so it's not as bad as it was on my old 180sx.
    VW Bora V6 4motion

    Comment


    • #3
      the 4mo boras will camber more the lower you go.
      can get control arms to control it and adjust it to needed
      Bora gone
      Vento VR6
      MKIV GSW TDI
      7P Touareg TDI

      Comment


      • #4
        yes neg,

        So how you going with the tyres, is it eating up the inside quick?
        by looking at the picture of your car, looks like you have a spacer as well. I have a 32mm spacer put on in my at the rear. I wonder if this play a part with the camber changes.

        did you guys made anychanges of did you leave it as it is?

        found this on the net
        http://www.ingallseng.com/31520-vw-r...-shims.htmladd i
        Last edited by revhead1016; 03-09-2012, 09:54 PM.
        2009 Tiguan TDI and 2007 Passat TDI

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by dylan8 View Post
          the 4mo boras will camber more the lower you go.
          can get control arms to control it and adjust it to needed
          Did you leave yours as it is?
          2009 Tiguan TDI and 2007 Passat TDI

          Comment


          • #6
            If you lower the car significantly, you'll put significant negative camber and positive toe variation on the rear wheels - it's just the way the suspension geometry is on the 4Mo chassis (the R32 has the same issue). Even with my PSS9s set not very low, I chewed out the inside of my rear tyres in < 10,000km - the camber isn't so much the issue as the toe (you end up dragging the inner edge of the tyres across the road as well as having them leaning inward at the top).

            Don't use static camber shims, they'll only work properly at one particular lowered height (they'll be wrong if you lower more or less than the geometry they produce is desgined for).

            The best option is adjustable control arms for the rear suspension. There are two arms on each side - if you just replace the lower arms, you get decent camber adjustability, and once you bring the camber in to a more "standard" setting, the toe should be reasonably good too.

            For more fine tuned control of both camber and toe, you can replace both upper and lower arms - with this setup, you can pretty much independently control camber and toe to get exactly the settings you want.

            ECSTuning sell both their own brand of adjustable rear control arms as well as the Gruvenparts ones. If you're interested, I can get you a price.
            Nothing to see here...

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Manaz View Post
              If you lower the car significantly, you'll put significant negative camber and positive toe variation on the rear wheels - it's just the way the suspension geometry is on the 4Mo chassis (the R32 has the same issue). Even with my PSS9s set not very low, I chewed out the inside of my rear tyres in < 10,000km - the camber isn't so much the issue as the toe (you end up dragging the inner edge of the tyres across the road as well as having them leaning inward at the top).

              Don't use static camber shims, they'll only work properly at one particular lowered height (they'll be wrong if you lower more or less than the geometry they produce is desgined for).

              The best option is adjustable control arms for the rear suspension. There are two arms on each side - if you just replace the lower arms, you get decent camber adjustability, and once you bring the camber in to a more "standard" setting, the toe should be reasonably good too.

              For more fine tuned control of both camber and toe, you can replace both upper and lower arms - with this setup, you can pretty much independently control camber and toe to get exactly the settings you want.

              ECSTuning sell both their own brand of adjustable rear control arms as well as the Gruvenparts ones. If you're interested, I can get you a price.
              That would be great Thanks.
              2009 Tiguan TDI and 2007 Passat TDI

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by revhead1016 View Post
                Did you leave yours as it is?
                mine is a FWD car, I used the shims you linked but thats because its the only option.
                yours can be controlled with the arms that Manaz suggested

                and no, spacers/adapaters/agressive offset wheels do not play any part in a car having more or less camber
                Bora gone
                Vento VR6
                MKIV GSW TDI
                7P Touareg TDI

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by dylan8 View Post
                  mine is a FWD car, I used the shims you linked but thats because its the only option.
                  yours can be controlled with the arms that Manaz suggested

                  and no, spacers/adapaters/agressive offset wheels do not play any part in a car having more or less camber
                  Dylan,
                  Are you happy with the shims and are you using one per side?
                  If I get the camber shims, I'm not sure if that will change tow in or do I need both?

                  I understand that mine is a different set up compared to the 4-mo's.


                  Thanks heaps and sorry to bring back an old thread!!!
                  Mk IV Golf GTI - BMP - GIAC chip, R32 wheels, KW coilovers, rear swaybar.
                  Originally Posted by JoeVR
                  I've never been a big fan of rotors, or really Japanese cars in general, so my choice would have to be..... an RX-8.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Speed View Post
                    Dylan,
                    Are you happy with the shims and are you using one per side?
                    If I get the camber shims, I'm not sure if that will change tow in or do I need both?

                    I understand that mine is a different set up compared to the 4-mo's.


                    Thanks heaps and sorry to bring back an old thread!!!
                    yes im using one per side, but some can be stacked.

                    each shim is different, mine didnt need camber adjustment, but once I lowered the car and the rear beam 'rolled forward' (typical mk4 FWD thing) the camber turns to toe in.
                    because I only did 1deg each side on top of factory it wasnt worth trying to work out the shim side to correct the toe or shim the brake calliper.
                    Mine had obvious toe in but was still within 'ok' results when the alignment guys checked it. I did wear out some tyres a bit quicker then the fronts due to the toe in wear (no sign of camber wear however, just toe)


                    So you really need to have the height of your car set to where you want, and have someone work out how to shim it at that piont, NOT when its lifted up on a jack or square on the rear beam
                    Bora gone
                    Vento VR6
                    MKIV GSW TDI
                    7P Touareg TDI

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by dylan8 View Post
                      yes im using one per side, but some can be stacked.
                      each shim is different, mine didnt need camber adjustment, but once I lowered the car and the rear beam 'rolled forward' (typical mk4 FWD thing) the camber turns to toe in.
                      because I only did 1deg each side on top of factory it wasnt worth trying to work out the shim side to correct the toe or shim the brake calliper.
                      Mine had obvious toe in but was still within 'ok' results when the alignment guys checked it. I did wear out some tyres a bit quicker then the fronts due to the toe in wear (no sign of camber wear however, just toe)

                      So you really need to have the height of your car set to where you want, and have someone work out how to shim it at that piont, NOT when its lifted up on a jack or square on the rear beam
                      Okay, thanks.
                      I suspect that I have about 3 degrees neg camber and also obvious toe in.
                      I'm happy with the height of the car as is and won't be messing with it.

                      My major concern is that I have minimal contact patch from the tyres to the road in a banked bend at speed and the rear tyres squeel like a b!+ch.

                      If I reduce the camber with a -1degree shim, I'm guessing that that will also reduce the toe in?

                      I may just buy both sets as they're not expensive and have a play with it from there.

                      Thanks heaps for your reply.
                      Mk IV Golf GTI - BMP - GIAC chip, R32 wheels, KW coilovers, rear swaybar.
                      Originally Posted by JoeVR
                      I've never been a big fan of rotors, or really Japanese cars in general, so my choice would have to be..... an RX-8.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        doesnt toe in give you more contact with the road when you have plenty of camber ? or am i wrong ?
                        i've got -3.5 camber on the back of my 4Motion .. with a fair bit of toe in .. the guys at the tyre shop said it's good to have the toe in for more even wear ..

                        sam
                        VW BORA 2003 V6 4Motion
                        Volkswagen Golf MK3 1997 CL 1.8L

                        Rammstien + Autobahn + Volkswagen = Leben !

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Doh, I should have said + 1 degree camber shim. I'm trying to correct the 3 degrees neg camber I have, Not increase it.

                          Sam, I guess it depends how much toe in your have.
                          With the articles I've read, they say that toe in is often worse for tyre wear than camber but I guess all things are relative.
                          Mk IV Golf GTI - BMP - GIAC chip, R32 wheels, KW coilovers, rear swaybar.
                          Originally Posted by JoeVR
                          I've never been a big fan of rotors, or really Japanese cars in general, so my choice would have to be..... an RX-8.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            This is what I used when I lowered my Bora to get rid of the neg camber. No one else seems to use them here, but my suspension man recommended them, and they worked well for me and cost $120, and could be fitted by the Wheel Alignment man... all good

                            Find SuperPro Parts for My Vehicle

                            They are distributed in Brisbane by Fulcrum...
                            sigpicBora V6 4Mo 2003 http://www.vwwatercooled.org.au/foru...ser-72675.html

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by bundabora View Post
                              This is what I used when I lowered my Bora to get rid of the neg camber. No one else seems to use them here, but my suspension man recommended them, and they worked well for me and cost $120, and could be fitted by the Wheel Alignment man... all good

                              Find SuperPro Parts for My Vehicle

                              They are distributed in Brisbane by Fulcrum...
                              you have 4mo. we are talking FWD.
                              there is next to no camber movement on the rear wheels of a FWD mk4 when lowering

                              completely different suspension setup
                              Bora gone
                              Vento VR6
                              MKIV GSW TDI
                              7P Touareg TDI

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X