Several factors at play...
Too much rear negative camber. Mfgs set up suspensions (even MINIs) with understeer for "safety". Adding more negative camber increases understeer, generally.
Too much negative camber *can* increase inner tire wear. In practice, this is most pronounced on runflats due to their overly stiff sidewalls; the inner edge of the tire carries most of the load with negative camber. This is greatly exacerbated if you drive at all on under-inflated runflats. And MANY people do, because it's hard to tell visually.
I wore out the inner edge of my runflats quickly. Has never happened on my non-runflats.
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BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIsLifetime Supporter
- May 4, 2009
- 2,896
- Professional Facilitator and Alignment Consultant
- Ratings:
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BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIsLifetime Supporter
- May 4, 2009
- 2,896
- Professional Facilitator and Alignment Consultant
- Ratings:
- +2,896 / 0 / -0
It's not a static system... And it all works together...and there are limits to most things.
So, in combination with everything else the way it comes from the factory, to a limit, more rear neg camber means more understeer, less means more oversteer.
Optimal neg rear camber maximizes traction... Not necessarily "more" neg rear camber.
But you really want to optimize your FRONT camber primarily, then set rear in balance to that, then fine tune with sway settings, etc. if you're out to do it "right".
I thought I was going to do it with a few mods when I started. And it began a 5 year suspension tuning odyssey. -
Crashton Club Coordinator
There is lots of good info out there. No reason to reinvent the wheel. Do your research & use what works well.
Many helpful folks here to help you.
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