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camber issues


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I have a 1983 ford ranger which I lifted 6in, and now I have lots of positive camber any suggestions on how I can fix that. I’ve seen camber bushings, if that’s the solution which ones do I need and what’s steps do I take
 


gaz

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Vehicle Year
1987
Make / Model
Ford
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87Ranger Endrigo 2.9l, 87BII Endrigo 4.0l
2WD / 4WD
4WD
Total Lift
Ranger 5" (2" suspension), BII 4" suspension
Total Drop
Ranger 5sp, BII A4LD
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Ranger 33"/4:10LS, BII 29"/3:73LS
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rangeradrian,

You will benefit from using an extended drop pitman arm.
 

ericbphoto

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1993
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Ford Ranger
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3.0 V6
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3.0L
Transmission
Manual
2WD / 4WD
4WD
Total Lift
6"
Tire Size
35"
My credo
In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are different.
rangeradrian,

You will benefit from using an extended drop pitman arm.
But that won't fix camber.

The bushings are the way to go for camber issues. Get bushings with the biggest range if adjustment that you can find.

What kind if lift did you do? If you did not replace your axle beam pivot brackets with brackets that lower the pivot points, you may never get the camber right unless you cut and resend the beams for proper camber.

There are some articles in the tech library that you should read. I'm having trouble pasting a link right now.
 
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rebuild83

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Ranger
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Automatic
2WD / 4WD
4WD
Total Lift
2.5 suspension
Tire Size
235/75 r 15
Did you try to have the front end aligned? Are using adjustable ecentrics? So many questions
 

Eddo Rogue

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OHV
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skyjacker front leveling kit
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Crossed threads are tight threads.
Maybe try the greatest degree adjustable camber bushings you can find...I've seen 4 degree ones for rangers. If that don't get it in the ballpark, you gotta change geometry elsewhere, the easiest but not best solution would be brackets. If you bought a lift kit, it probably included them.

Once in the ballpark, you can drive it a little to break in and settle the new springs. Both my trucks had a little extra camber when the springs were new, and both settled nicely after break in, requiring minimal camber adjustment.
 
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Automatic
So I actually got the rough country kit which the I beam brackets and the radius arm brackets, but the kit I bought was a 4 in lift but the front I got 2 inch adapters to be 6in
 

Eddo Rogue

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Ranger 4x4
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OHV
Transmission
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2WD / 4WD
4WD
Total Lift
skyjacker front leveling kit
Tire Size
31-10.50R15
My credo
Crossed threads are tight threads.
You could remove the adaptors until your springs break in. Or probably need bigger drop brackets. Otherwise go as much as you can on camber alignment bushings and live with it.
 

gaz

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Vehicle Year
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Make / Model
Ford
Engine Size
87Ranger Endrigo 2.9l, 87BII Endrigo 4.0l
2WD / 4WD
4WD
Total Lift
Ranger 5" (2" suspension), BII 4" suspension
Total Drop
Ranger 5sp, BII A4LD
Tire Size
Ranger 33"/4:10LS, BII 29"/3:73LS
My credo
Deengineer until it is how Blue Oval should have sold it!!
rangeradrian,

I would use the 4" lift without the extra spacers. I have a 4" lift on my BII, expecting to need the extra adjustment bushings, I bought them and never needed them. On my Ranger I have a 2" lift, same/same; though both the 2" and the 4" did benefit from the extended drop pitman arms.)
 

ericbphoto

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Vehicle Year
1993
Make / Model
Ford Ranger
Engine Type
3.0 V6
Engine Size
3.0L
Transmission
Manual
2WD / 4WD
4WD
Total Lift
6"
Tire Size
35"
My credo
In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are different.
You probably will not find a camber bushing to correct for those coil spring spacers. I recommend getting rid of them and use the 4" lift kit as intended.

A dropped pitman arm, as mentioned, is a good idea to correct the problem with the steering geometry coming off the steering box. But it has nothing to do with camber.

These are dropped pitman arms. They come in various sizes and are a bit pricey.

NpgXoMT.jpg
 
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scotts90ranger

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4WD
Total Lift
6
Tire Size
35"
Yeah, I might pull the coil spacers until the springs settle a bit... I don't think there's alignment bushings for the D28 as fancy as the D35 bushings...

You're not kidding on the pitman arm prices, that bottom one was $200 when I got it 12 years ago but it was designed for a F350 so it weighs like 10 pounds... beefy mofo... but I have no complaints on how it drives steering wise since everyone convinced me to get one, it was worth it...
 

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