I drew a diagram as I could not get the pictures to show what I wanted to.
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Note: I haven't done the bushings on the trailing arms and panard bar yet, thats next.
Yes, not by much. I measured the width from the center of the tires and the front is 133cm and the rear 131.5cm. The total difference of the rear wheels is a 2cm shift to the pasenger side, I measured this using a meter stick from the apex of the wheel arch on the body panel., If I could get the axle to shift 1cm towards the driver side, in theory, it should be centered.the actual track width is shorter in the rear?
My bushings are shot, they are all cracked and "smashed" looking, good technical term, so I planned on replacing them. According to the manual I am to do them one at a time. I plan on sanding and painting them so it will take awhile to get all five. Once I get them back in I'll give an update if that solves the shifted axle. Thanks for all the good replies.a shift to one side is most likely bushings.
The axle is often not centered even on stock ride height cars.DieselSpider wrote:If you change the ride height then you will also change the position of the rear axle when the car is unladen/at rest as the tracking bar will be at a different position in its arc.
Yep and lowering or raising can make it better or much worse. A good alignment shop will check this during their thrust line verification.vandor wrote:The axle is often not centered even on stock ride height cars.DieselSpider wrote:If you change the ride height then you will also change the position of the rear axle when the car is unladen/at rest as the tracking bar will be at a different position in its arc.