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#11
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Since the introduction of the E53 that have been many advancements in tires. IMO, if you are a conservative driver, a better route to reduce tire wear are tires that have a higher mileage rating. They will be harder and will also compromise handling but they should not change the front to rear balance. This is coming from one that is all about performance and from day one has had very aggressive alignment specs. I'm not saying-- how to make the tires last longer specs is a recipe for disaster. I will say that I would not be comfortable with these specs on DFW freeways. Can someone explain why anyone buys any vehicle, especially a BMW, and then dials back any of the performance?
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Dallas Last edited by bcredliner; 09-25-2015 at 09:28 PM. |
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#12
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Quote:
Front camber is not supposed to be adjustable but you can tweak it a little bit at the top shock mount. Either of these out of spec is usually a worn/defected bushing that has to be replaced.
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04 X5 3.0i auto 03 X5 4.6is |
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#13
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Does this shop have any software to reset the steering sensor?
Care to post the shop? I need an alignment. 40 bucks is a steal! |
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#14
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Bcred - At least in my X when it was fully stock and how it is now, the thing always has understeer if your really ripping it up... Only time i got rid of that a bit is when i ran it in rwd only mode.
@blackbeast For your alignment specs you should have had the camber dialed in as close as possible (sometimes it is still alot depending on how worn rear arms/bushings are and how low) You are correct in wanting the zeroed out toe, thats how i had mine done and I only go places where the guy will listen to the settings I want. Mine was zeroed out almost both sides, and I think last alignment i had -2.5 camber as close as he could bring it in.. Havent had any abnormal wear issues or handling (i run the car hard). The mileage i had when i put on my rear delinte d8 tires brand new was around 74k. I am now at 107k and the tires are at 2/32 maybe slightly less will be changing soon enough. I was still getting slow camber wear that adds up eventually on the insides of the tires, however when i bought my new wheels (they are directional tires) so i had them flip mounted around meaning fresh depth on the inside edge again. Using that method i got out 32.5-33k out of these tires at low height, aggressive braking/driving/turning. Cant complain.
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2006 X5 4.8is Fully Loaded
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#15
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If you have RWD vehicle, front wheels should be diled slightly inwards as resistance of the road pushes them outwards. If you have FWD, front wheels should diled slightly outwards as forces from drive axcels pulling them inwards. We're talking about miserable numbed of degrees but I believe that if something is specified to be such and such, it should be followed.
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2009 Range Rover Sport SC HST Limited Edition 2014 Infiniti Q50 AWD |
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#16
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You are absolutely right, I'm always screwing up understeer and oversteer. I corrected it in my post. I should stick to tight and loose, those terms I don't confuse.
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Dallas |
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#17
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Of course, Alignment World, 1134 SE 82nd. Beware though, they're first come first serve. I got lucky when I arrived and he took me right in but by the time I left there was 3-4 waiting in line, I got the impression they stay pretty busy
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____ 2005 X5 4.8is ____ ![]() Previous : 1998 M3, 1999 328is, 1996 328i, 1994 325i convertible, 1999 528i, 1998 740i, 1999 740iL |
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