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1G Adjusting rear toe - 1G AWD

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99gst_racer

Moderator
11,976
1,542
Apr 5, 2003
Coloma, Michigan
Let's discuss this. Has anyone improved upon the factory configuration for adjusting rear toe? I'm not a big fan of adjusting it with a trailing arm, but it seems that it would be better to have a system that moved the arm left and right, rather than in and out.

I'm considering building something like in the picture below. But I've yet to play around with a 1G on an alignment rack. Has anyone else played around with this idea or something similar?

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The rear trailing arm operates really at about a 45* angle no left to right or up to back. It comes in from the side. Nothing really special to do if you want to do heim joints, get the Jay Racing kit and be done with it. Set the camber bolt in the middle and adjust accordingly via the heim. Keep in mind adjusting the heim joint is a PITA because you have to drop the trailing arm itself to adjust it.

Heim joints = great for race cars bad for noise and harshness.
 
I'm also heim jointed in my 1g both at the trailing arm and the upper arms. Toe hasn't been an issue but I know the whole design isn't optimal. A whole rear suspension redesign would be awesome. Huge task though.
 
The rear trailing arm operates really at about a 45* angle no left to right or up to back. It comes in from the side. Nothing really special to do if you want to do heim joints, get the Jay Racing kit and be done with it. Set the camber bolt in the middle and adjust accordingly via the heim. Keep in mind adjusting the heim joint is a PITA because you have to drop the trailing arm itself to adjust it.

Heim joints = great for race cars bad for noise and harshness.
It operates at an angle, yes; But I'd guess closer to 60-70*. I haven't measured, but it's clear from an image. This is why i think there could be a benefit by left/right adjustment. That should translate to a more true toe adjustment without moving the wheel forward or backward at all.

A huge benefit to this idea is that you wouldn't have to drop the arm to adjust the heim for a toe change.

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And I'm extremely familiar with using heims on suspension components. Only the cheap, low quality ones are noisy. ;-)

I already produce and sell my own ATE kit. I'm asking about changing up toe adjustment because I'm designing/building a 1G tubular rear subframe right now and now would be the time to implement such a change/feature.
 
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How about a whole new trailing arm design with the new subframe? Is it possible to cut the trailing arm off and box in the hub? Then run something tubular like posted in OP?
 
How about a whole new trailing arm design with the new subframe? Is it possible to cut the trailing arm off and box in the hub? Then run something tubular like posted in OP?
A tube trailing arm is the plan. Right now, I'm just working on how I want to connect it to the subframe.
 
Nice Paul! I was a little confused thinking you were trying to re mount your style of toe eliminator!
 
I figure I will post. A different design of toe adjustment 1G could really benefit. I found out the hard way. When you change toe, the wheel base changes with the toe which sucks totally. I dont have pictures at work PC but when I started playing with 3kgt rear trailing arms install and I needed to modify the track width so when I cut the toe section of the trailing arm out I also moved the center of the wheel forward like 2 inches and that created more work then I thought it needed. The only problem I see with this is how many people willing to pay for it and how many people are willing to cut their trailing arms. Maybe drag racers to save weight. I love the fact that someone still making parts for these cars so thank you for that and I am sorry for not buying your arms.
 
Paul, I purchased your ATE kit, and all I can say is: well done sir!
It was excellent, I had no issues getting it installed, and the price was great.

I myself have been wondering about changing how toe is adjusted and if it could be changed, since even with the ATE kit it's still a pain since the arm has to be dropped, and my clamshell mounts are pretty tight.

I contemplated a tube arm with threaded adjusters like your upper camber arms (I'd have bought them too if I didn't have 3sx arms laying around already), but I like the side-side idea better now that it's been mentioned, and it solves the issue of dropping the arm constantly.

I may try to figure something out, or if you get something sorted im in, long as it's reliable and stout!
 
Paul, I purchased your ATE kit, and all I can say is: well done sir!
It was excellent, I had no issues getting it installed, and the price was great.

I myself have been wondering about changing how toe is adjusted and if it could be changed, since even with the ATE kit it's still a pain since the arm has to be dropped, and my clamshell mounts are pretty tight.

I contemplated a tube arm with threaded adjusters like your upper camber arms (I'd have bought them too if I didn't have 3sx arms laying around already), but I like the side-side idea better now that it's been mentioned, and it solves the issue of dropping the arm constantly.

I may try to figure something out, or if you get something sorted im in, long as it's reliable and stout!
Sweet! I'm glad to hear you like the ATE kit! In my experience, you really only need to get the heim length close and then you can fine tune from there using the OE eccentric bolt. That method sure beats dropping and raising the arm a dozen times! :)

I'm waiting up for some time to free up next month to get going on the 1G rear subframe build again. I'm not sure if the first prototype will feature something like this, but I certainly plan to play around with it eventually.
 
Sweet! I'm glad to hear you like the ATE kit! In my experience, you really only need to get the heim length close and then you can fine tune from there using the OE eccentric bolt. That method sure beats dropping and raising the arm a dozen times! :)

I'm waiting up for some time to free up next month to get going on the 1G rear subframe build again. I'm not sure if the first prototype will feature something like this, but I certainly plan to play around with it eventually.

I am oh so patiently waiting on that 1g rear subframe of yours. Been putting alot of stuff on hold so I can get one of these when it becomes available:) you make some amazing stuff paul and cant wait to get your products. Just want the rear subframe first LOL thanks for all you do for the community.
Thank you
Seth
 
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There's a bolt that connects the tube of the trailing arm to the bushing spigot for the active toe control. Remove the spigot, wire wheel the rubber off of it, and then weld a pair of threaded bosses on to the tube. This would allow you to thread a bolt into either side of the spigot and control the toe. That would be the lowest cost option.
 
Hey there, reviving this thread from the dead to ask: do you really have to completely remove the trailing arm to adjust the toe via the ATE kit? Or can you possibly disconnect the ATE bolt and maybe one control arm and pry the trailing arm down enough to be able to turn the heim joint?
 
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