Loweredon33s
Well-Known Member
I didn’t always have control arms. I originally had more than -2 degrees of camber, lots of people told me my tires would wear prematurely but like 20k later they were still wearing great (rotated twice)Well, friend, I could sure use some of that expertise of yours. I had the Belltech kit installed to achieve a 2/4 drop back in November of '21. At that time, I don't recall anyone on this thread mentioning not being able to achieve an alignment that wasn't within factory spec. Fast forward to this past March when I had a rotate & balance done (about 10k miles after the lowering & alignment) and imagine my surprise when I was informed that my front tires showed significant wear on the inside edge of each tire. Because the shop that did the Belltech install subbed the alignment out, I have no idea of what degree of caster/camber they were able to achieve.
In any event, while appearance is important to me, the primary reason I had the lowering done was to make ingress/egress easier (I'm a paraplegic). So, what I'm looking for now is an out-of-the-box solution for this alignment issue. Any ideas or am I just out of luck? Thanks a bunch in advance for your insight.
My point here is that toe and caster play a role in tire life too.
At 2/4” I was able to achieve a great alignment with good handling and tire wear but it takes someone who knows what they’re doing to make it good.
The entire reason we bought an alignment machine is because we were tired of being embarrassed by the crappy work we got when we farmed it out.
What year is your truck?
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