- Joined
- Aug 6, 2007
- Messages
- 5,332
- State - Country
- GA - USA
- Vehicle Year
- 1999
- Vehicle
- Ford Ranger
- Engine
- 5.0
- Transmission
- Automatic
- Total Drop
- few inches
- Tire Size
- ~30"
I know that these trucks are setup up for pretty neutral camber from the factory. Want to say that the spec is -0.5° (+/- 0.5°), atleast that's what Explorer FSM calls out, I don't have one for a Ranger. That setting is great for a general purpose daily driver especially a truck that is likely to see some time offroad and plenty of articulation. That isn't this truck...
I guess I should say what this truck is. It's a 1999 Ranger 4wd that has been V8 AWD swapped. At current it's sitting on about a 29" tire and has lift blocks removed from rear and torsion bars are backed down. Not sure on current front height, as I need to balance that and alignability. Aim is to go a little lower and smaller tires when/if control arms ever become available to correct camber and balljoint angles. Rear end has got 1" BII anti sway bar, and front will be getting a bigger bar from an Explorer Limited when I get around to pulling it.
I'm aiming for more of a fun driver that is set up for handling on windy roads, but still at home on the highway. Not too concerned about accellerated tire wear, the way I do curves I never get good tire life anyway, might actually improve if alignments is setup for it. I understand that some negative camber is good for handling on a vehicle that is being setup like this. Might actually be a good thing since with components currently available I can't get the alignment back to factory spec anyway. I'm trying to figure out how much camber angle would be good for this setup.
Thoughts....
I guess I should say what this truck is. It's a 1999 Ranger 4wd that has been V8 AWD swapped. At current it's sitting on about a 29" tire and has lift blocks removed from rear and torsion bars are backed down. Not sure on current front height, as I need to balance that and alignability. Aim is to go a little lower and smaller tires when/if control arms ever become available to correct camber and balljoint angles. Rear end has got 1" BII anti sway bar, and front will be getting a bigger bar from an Explorer Limited when I get around to pulling it.
I'm aiming for more of a fun driver that is set up for handling on windy roads, but still at home on the highway. Not too concerned about accellerated tire wear, the way I do curves I never get good tire life anyway, might actually improve if alignments is setup for it. I understand that some negative camber is good for handling on a vehicle that is being setup like this. Might actually be a good thing since with components currently available I can't get the alignment back to factory spec anyway. I'm trying to figure out how much camber angle would be good for this setup.
Thoughts....