Quote Originally Posted by techinspector1 View Post
Same answer I gave you on the other forum.....
I don't think I would try to second-guess the professional engineers who designed this arrangement in the first place.....not unless I was also a mechanical engineer.

I will include a link to the two best suspension books I ever read though.....I buy used to save some sheckels…..

buy the first offering here, from mdsvtr….
https://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-list...condition=used

buy the first offering here, from oncereadbooks….
https://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-list...+carroll+smith

Also, probably one of the best chassis and suspension engineers that I ever read was a fellow named Billy Shope, who called himself the Philippine Cowboy. He was one of the original Ramchargers, a team of Chrysler engineers who fielded a 1949 Plymouth coupe in C/Gas back in the late 50's, a car called The High and Mighty.
https://www.allpar.com/racing/high-mighty.html

I had links to Billy's writings and formulas at one time, but have lost track of them. He hung around on Hotrodders for many years, but I have not seen anything of him in the past few years. I think maybe he moved on to that drag strip in the sky.

https://www.pro-touring.com/threads/...-Shope-page-18
BINGO-BINGO-BINGO, read this......
http://www.shopeshop.org/contentsDrag.htm
.
Hats off to you for the links to Billy Shope's writings, thought I was the only one still alive that used his teaching as a reference! After taking just enough engineering courses to be dangerous I do like to play with suspension ideas. As you and others have said, too many overlook things like Ackerman angle, bump steer, etc. My justification for tweaking the factory designs is that they had to build a car that Grandma was comfortable driving, I still attempt to "tune" them to my liking, sometimes successfully, sometimes not!