Bad negative camber on rear wheels. Help please.
Bad negative camber on rear wheels. Help please.
So here's my problem.
My '87 L sedan with 3" lift and king springs has very bad negative camber on the rear wheels. And just so as there's no mistaking which is which, they're sticking out at the bottom like so. / -- \
The front wheels have the usual positive camber from the springs which I'll get around to fixing some day, but it's not out as far as the rear is negative.
I've had a good look under there and can't for the life of me work out why it's doing this, let alone how to fix it. (Doesn't seem to be any camber adjustments.)
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Tommo.
My '87 L sedan with 3" lift and king springs has very bad negative camber on the rear wheels. And just so as there's no mistaking which is which, they're sticking out at the bottom like so. / -- \
The front wheels have the usual positive camber from the springs which I'll get around to fixing some day, but it's not out as far as the rear is negative.
I've had a good look under there and can't for the life of me work out why it's doing this, let alone how to fix it. (Doesn't seem to be any camber adjustments.)
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Tommo.
This is common, and worse with the L's.
Put the trolley jack under the diff, and take the car's weight,
Loosen the three bolts on either side that hold the flat plate to the outside of the swingarm forward of the hub,
Let the jack down and even stand on the towbar if needed,
as the car goes down the camber should get more negative,
When it gets to a resonable point tighten the bolts up.
This is the fix for Posative or Negative camber on the back.
Daza.

Put the trolley jack under the diff, and take the car's weight,
Loosen the three bolts on either side that hold the flat plate to the outside of the swingarm forward of the hub,
Let the jack down and even stand on the towbar if needed,
as the car goes down the camber should get more negative,
When it gets to a resonable point tighten the bolts up.
This is the fix for Posative or Negative camber on the back.
Daza.

[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
make sure you check the bushings in the rear swings arms. worn bushings will also contribute to the problem.
89 L wagon: twin carbs, kings, kybs, 2" lift, rear discs, clutch lsd, L awd box, Kumho KL71 27s
85 Vortex: ej20 G, awd, 5 stud, 17's, almost on the road!
88 Bush basher L wagon: Welded rear diff
MY10 GEN5 Outback: white, and completely normal
85 Vortex: ej20 G, awd, 5 stud, 17's, almost on the road!
88 Bush basher L wagon: Welded rear diff
MY10 GEN5 Outback: white, and completely normal
Surely u mean it will get more positive ... I'm sure he doesn't want MORE negative camber!daza wrote: as the car goes down the camber should get more negative,

I've had that problem too, this solution helped somewhat but I've found most L series have negative camber at the rear, its just more noticable after a lift.
If it's suddenly gotten worse immediated after the lift are you sure the shockie lift brackets are installed correctly? Maybe you put the bolts on the wrong side or the bracket it backwards or something like that.... any photos?
EZ30 L series - Monsterwagon
https://www.ausubaru.com.au/viewtopic.php?f=71&t=26163
https://www.ausubaru.com.au/viewtopic.php?f=71&t=26163
It'll go positive when you loosen them with the weight off the wheels,AndrewT wrote:Surely u mean it will get more positive ... I'm sure he doesn't want MORE negative camber!![]()
then as you lower it the camber gets less positive then negative.
Some people have trouble with there L's going positive in the rear too!
Daza.

[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Yeah but that's not really designed as an official adjustment is it? I thought it's just because those bolts gradually slip over the years, also not helped by slamming the rear end offroading etc.
EZ30 L series - Monsterwagon
https://www.ausubaru.com.au/viewtopic.php?f=71&t=26163
https://www.ausubaru.com.au/viewtopic.php?f=71&t=26163
If you want to get serious with adjustment of camber, you can put a K-Mac or similar adjustment on the back trailing arm. It should adjust vertically for camber and horizontally for toe.... Although i have a brumby the suspension is very similar to the "L" series (read l struts in the rear) and i have ) degrees camber. I can email/post some pics if people want?
"Bianca"
'86 Brumby - Dual Port Heads, 5 Speed Dual Range, Custom Cam, Tuned Weber, Tuned Suspension, 2" Body Lift Kit, LSD, 14" rims, 2.25" Exhaust, Snorkel, Dual Batteries, DVD Player, UHF, VHF, etc. Offically now part of the 350, 000 km Club!
And still pulling like a freight train.

"Claudia"
82 MY Wagon - EA81T, RS Liberty WIAC, 5 Speed Dual Range, Tuned Suspension, 14" Rims 27" Tyres, 2" Body Lift Kit, Apline Head unit, UHF, Roof Console, L Series seats, Soon to have New Paint, snorkel, Dual batteries, etc

'86 Brumby - Dual Port Heads, 5 Speed Dual Range, Custom Cam, Tuned Weber, Tuned Suspension, 2" Body Lift Kit, LSD, 14" rims, 2.25" Exhaust, Snorkel, Dual Batteries, DVD Player, UHF, VHF, etc. Offically now part of the 350, 000 km Club!


"Claudia"
82 MY Wagon - EA81T, RS Liberty WIAC, 5 Speed Dual Range, Tuned Suspension, 14" Rims 27" Tyres, 2" Body Lift Kit, Apline Head unit, UHF, Roof Console, L Series seats, Soon to have New Paint, snorkel, Dual batteries, etc

Well I tried Daza's method this arvo. Jacked it up, loosened the bolts, lowered it down, tightened the bolts. It looked good until I drove backwards and forwards a few times, then it was straight back to bad negative.
Some of the bushings look a little worn, in particular the ones in the bottom shock absorber housing, so I'll try replacing a couple of them.
Some pictures of your set up would be great Matt, it'd be awesome to actually have ADJUSTABLE camber and toe.
And by the way, I would've taken some pictures but my camera's broken.
Some of the bushings look a little worn, in particular the ones in the bottom shock absorber housing, so I'll try replacing a couple of them.
Some pictures of your set up would be great Matt, it'd be awesome to actually have ADJUSTABLE camber and toe.
And by the way, I would've taken some pictures but my camera's broken.

Unfortunately you can't do both, you get stuck with one or other.... As the saying goes a picture says a thousand words... Please Note this is Camber adjustment, for toe you would need to turn the adjustment 90 degrees and you would lose camber adjustment.






"Bianca"
'86 Brumby - Dual Port Heads, 5 Speed Dual Range, Custom Cam, Tuned Weber, Tuned Suspension, 2" Body Lift Kit, LSD, 14" rims, 2.25" Exhaust, Snorkel, Dual Batteries, DVD Player, UHF, VHF, etc. Offically now part of the 350, 000 km Club!
And still pulling like a freight train.

"Claudia"
82 MY Wagon - EA81T, RS Liberty WIAC, 5 Speed Dual Range, Tuned Suspension, 14" Rims 27" Tyres, 2" Body Lift Kit, Apline Head unit, UHF, Roof Console, L Series seats, Soon to have New Paint, snorkel, Dual batteries, etc

'86 Brumby - Dual Port Heads, 5 Speed Dual Range, Custom Cam, Tuned Weber, Tuned Suspension, 2" Body Lift Kit, LSD, 14" rims, 2.25" Exhaust, Snorkel, Dual Batteries, DVD Player, UHF, VHF, etc. Offically now part of the 350, 000 km Club!


"Claudia"
82 MY Wagon - EA81T, RS Liberty WIAC, 5 Speed Dual Range, Tuned Suspension, 14" Rims 27" Tyres, 2" Body Lift Kit, Apline Head unit, UHF, Roof Console, L Series seats, Soon to have New Paint, snorkel, Dual batteries, etc

did this yesterday. I really cant see how loosening those three bolts off, and then re-tightening them would adjust camber, BUT it worked! i now have strait back wheels and heaps more height!...even took it for a quick bash on some pretty hardcore rocky terrain, and theyre still nice and strait(if not a tad positive!)
alex
alex
my07 Outback
my13 Hyundai i45(shhhh)
my02 Gen3 Liberty limited ed.
previously
L-series wagon, LSD, EJ20turbo, 29in tyres, 'wanky wagon'
2000 gen3 outback, lifted, otherwise stock.
my13 Hyundai i45(shhhh)
my02 Gen3 Liberty limited ed.
previously
L-series wagon, LSD, EJ20turbo, 29in tyres, 'wanky wagon'
2000 gen3 outback, lifted, otherwise stock.
This is just FYI. When I consulted a very reputable WA Suspension place recently about replacing the bushes in the shocks they felt that if they had seen that much use that the bush had flogged out then I was probably better off to just replace the entire sturt.tommo wrote:Some of the bushings look a little worn, in particular the ones in the bottom shock absorber housing, so I'll try replacing a couple of them.
Anywhere new and/or something we should know about or just 1 of the usual haunts? {sorry for potential hijack}Alex wrote: even took it for a quick bash on some pretty hardcore rocky terrain alex
Toyota 105 Series LandCruiser (that nobody on here wants to really hear about).
RX Touring Wagon - fitted out for 4WDing (currently collecting dust).
RX Project - will be road only at this stage (and currently taking way to long to finish).
RX Touring Wagon - fitted out for 4WDing (currently collecting dust).
RX Project - will be road only at this stage (and currently taking way to long to finish).
nah jaffa its just some small tracks near his house we usually run off to for testing purposes...not worth even looking at its small and short and will take 5 minutes to do it...we just went there to go over some hardcore bumps to test
dave
dave
no more subarus
[/SIZE] [/color][/B][/color][/SIZE][/color]http://community.webshots.com/user/D3V1L9
[/SIZE] [/color][/B][/color][/SIZE][/color]http://community.webshots.com/user/D3V1L9
On brumbys with the torsion bar rear end you could wind the torsion bar up to give more positive and unwind it to give more negative camber. Eg raising rear (more positive) or lowering rear end(more negative). Done by the Bolt and lock nut in the centre of the torsioin bar. I have a hole drilled in my tray for easy access. Mine runs about 1-2 degrees negative camber on the back for better corner holding grip on the tar.
So many optioins not enough time or money
