Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I recently got rear upper camber arms installed on my R33 and I told them to adjust it to 0 degrees camber as it was going to be a street/drag car. But now I have alot of scrubbing problems with my 19x9.5 +38's and my 17x9 +26's? What do people do to combat this but also keep a nice wide contact patch. I will need to get the guards rolled and pushed out if possible but what else can be done?

Thanks

i have 18x9.5 +38 on the rear of my r34 with 265/35/18 tyres and yes they scrub and i have a tad less than 1 degree camber on the rear

your choices are:

-go a smaller tyres size

-dial in more camber

-roll the lip of the guards

im yet to get my rolled so i have lifted the rear a tad so it doesnt scrub much, but ultimately i am going to get the guards rolled

  • 2 weeks later...

I'm running 3deg neg camber front and rear for the slicks (castor at 5 deg) and so far it doesn't appear to be affecting the street tyres adversely (on my awd Stagea) .

Toe in probably has more to so with "scrubbing". I have zero rear and zero to 2mm toe out front. What's yours?

And as above hard suspension will make both tyre wear and handling worse.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Hope you aren't too sore after that one, might take a day or 2 to notice yet and I guess it is a loooooong drive home. On the bright side, tube frame front end is a thing at superlap, right?
    • https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18rmVb1SKB/ 
    • The chart of front pressure to rear pressure (with one being on the x axis and the other being on the y axis) is not a straight line on a typical proportioning valve. At lower pressures there is a straight line with one slope, and at higher pressures that changes to a lower slope. That creates a bend in the line at that pressure, called the knee point. If you do not change the proportionng as the pressure gets higher, you will suffer excessive pressure (at one end of the car or the other, depending on which way you look at the proportioning action) and then get lockups at that end. The HFM BM57, from my memory of previous discussions, is based on the BM57 from a different car (to a Skyline), with a different requirement for the location of the knee point and the distribution of pressure front to rear, and so is not a good choice for an upgrade on a Skyline. Here's a couple of links to some old posts, one from here, one from elsewhere. A lot of it pertains to adjustable prop valves, but the idea is the same. There are plenty of discussions on here about this issue from al the many years of people wanting a cheap/accessible option. https://grassrootsmotorsports.com/forum/grm/learn-me-brake-proportioning-valves/236880/page1/ https://grassrootsmotorsports.com/forum/grm/learn-me-brake-proportioning-valves/236880/page1/  
    • Yeah dunno why johhny posted that here with no context, just post on FB/insta bro where he put it up?  Laine had an off at T4 during Thurs prac, he's ok, car is less than perfect, they are done for the weekend, he can fill in the rest. Bando also binned it like 100m up the road.   
    • I feel there must have been a FB/insta post and the weekend did not start well at all I hope everyone is all okay
×
×
  • Create New...