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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
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    164

    Default Questions on a dlm alignments.

    How do you find the centerline of a dlm?? How do you square the rear end to this centerline?? Is that something you want to do?? New to this stuff and when I ask car builders, all I ever get is just measure the rods, square the rods to the Rearend tubes (just eyeball that!) and set the J-bar. Everything is fine after that. I would like to know more. We had a Rayburn and CJ did tell me the the right frame rail was set at 2 degrees. I got on ACAD and did some measurments and found a way to square the rear end to the right side rail. It made a huge difference in the car! We have had several 4 bar cars and I have never been comfortable not knowing this info. Am I worring about nothing??

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
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    1,238

    Default

    square it up to the engine plate...

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
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    234

    Default

    On a lot of the cars trying to figure out where square/straight is can be quite hard.

    I think what's more important than determining what you exactly have for a rear end square measurement, is being able to replicate the measurement easy and using that as a reference as you make adjustments to the car. A lot of guys drop a plumb off of the engine plate and measure back that way though.

    One tip I was taught a quite a while ago. Put a punch mark, or drill a small hole (1/8") in the 4-bar mounting plate on both sides. This way you can but the tape measure against the tube or birdcage (where ever you chose and is easiest) and be able to measure to the exact same point every time.
    Since you're making those marks, if you go through the time of squaring the rear end (where ever you chose to square off of), you can put those marks at the same distance so it makes measuring roll back a lot easier.
    Here's my little home on Youtube!
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  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    334

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by dirty white boy View Post
    square it up to the engine plate...
    NOT!!!

    most all late are built square on a jig.but engine are off set most of the time and you will get a longer reading on one side.do to different fronts and offsets you can not go off wheel base. use the rear bars like they said on the rears the rear has been squared on the jig to those bar lengths.

    for example our new car that is on the jig now is set up with the rear squared but has a shorter left bottom rod then the right. and with the lower we are using the left side wheel base is 3/4 inch longer that the right. this is built into the chassis to tighten the car. and do to were the engine is there is no way to tape the left side back you could never get to the tube. so in short call the builder and go by there bar length.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Posts
    491

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by twisterf5 View Post
    NOT!!!

    most all late are built square on a jig.but engine are off set most of the time and you will get a longer reading on one side.do to different fronts and offsets you can not go off wheel base. use the rear bars like they said on the rears the rear has been squared on the jig to those bar lengths.

    for example our new car that is on the jig now is set up with the rear squared but has a shorter left bottom rod then the right. and with the lower we are using the left side wheel base is 3/4 inch longer that the right. this is built into the chassis to tighten the car. and do to were the engine is there is no way to tape the left side back you could never get to the tube. so in short call the builder and go by there bar length.
    The problem I am having with this is.... If you go off bar lenths, how do you allow for birdcage timing and ride height. My builder (GRT) says RR height is to be 12.5 from top rail and the left to be determined by bite. Well that leaves LR ride height wide open, and of coarse the more bite added to LR increases height, timing, and static rear steer. So there lies my confusion.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    334

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jason29a View Post
    The problem I am having with this is.... If you go off bar lenths, how do you allow for birdcage timing and ride height. My builder (GRT) says RR height is to be 12.5 from top rail and the left to be determined by bite. Well that leaves LR ride height wide open, and of coarse the more bite added to LR increases height, timing, and static rear steer. So there lies my confusion.
    set the bars to what they say and ride height.then you can mark rear lower brackets so you can square it that way. but you will have to set it to there base line set up first.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Marengo IN
    Posts
    247

    Default

    I thought the original post was more about the side to side? I am wondering that some my self as I am trying to square up one now and the rails aren't the same left to right.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    334

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by racer69 View Post
    I thought the original post was more about the side to side? I am wondering that some my self as I am trying to square up one now and the rails aren't the same left to right.
    if that is what you are trying to do. you still need to contact the chassis builder. car could of use several length tubes. if you have the right rear end under that chassis most all will go off j-bar length to square the rear from side to side.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Posts
    491

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by twisterf5 View Post
    if that is what you are trying to do. you still need to contact the chassis builder. car could of use several length tubes. if you have the right rear end under that chassis most all will go off j-bar length to square the rear from side to side.
    What chassis are you running. With ours that still leaves everything out of square and time.

    Do you go back and adjust your birdcage timing. Im just trying to get a feel how other do it.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    334

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jason29a View Post
    What chassis are you running. With ours that still leaves everything out of square and time.

    Do you go back and adjust your birdcage timing. Im just trying to get a feel how other do it.
    we build our own. right now our new chassis is on the jig it is something you would have to see.the chassis is square on the jig side to side up down front to back if you put a level on just about anything it is level.so we will set the rear square on the jig set the cages and bar angles i like to run cages strait up. than like a lot of car there is a mark some were to tape off of. can be a punch mark a hole. so if we index the cage we can tape off that punch mark and go back square.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    2,319

    Default

    Contact patches and the suspension mounting points are what matters. What the chassis builder is trying to accomplish with theirs is a???????????Seek information from chassis builder would be my recommendation.
    BUCKLE UP NOW, YA HEAR?

  12. #12
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Posts
    491

    Default

    My question is.... One you set your bar lenths, ride heights, axle drop,and desired bite. Are most of you going back and checking birdcage timing.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    1,014

    Default

    I had an older car, with no real square points, and no method to reach the builder. Typically the midplate is located straight in the car, if it was not you would have many issues with drivetrain lining up and many other issues. So everybody can agree that on most every car that is not bent, the midplate is straight across in the car. The center of the midplate may not be the centerline of the car but the plate is perpendicular to the centerline.

    Now we have estabilished a line perpendicular to the actual centerline of the car (wherever it may be). Using some trig we can now fabricate a new line that is parrallel to cennterline (perpendicular to midplate). I would often do this along the left side of the car, then I could measure off that new parrallel line to line up my left side wheels. Setting your car at baseline, you can use these two lines, the midplate and the new left side parrallel line to measure almost any point in the chassis, checking rear trail, or left/right wheels in line... anything can be checked.

    Yes you should check indexing, and all the other set up items, this above can be used to check and verify items with the car. Also this may help if you ever bend the car in the future, or to find if it is bent.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Marengo IN
    Posts
    247

    Default

    That method should work for me! Thanks ZeroRacing!

    I have been trying and trying to get ahold of the builder and no luck.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Posts
    164

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by zeroracing View Post
    I had an older car, with no real square points, and no method to reach the builder. Typically the midplate is located straight in the car, if it was not you would have many issues with drivetrain lining up and many other issues. So everybody can agree that on most every car that is not bent, the midplate is straight across in the car. The center of the midplate may not be the centerline of the car but the plate is perpendicular to the centerline.

    Now we have estabilished a line perpendicular to the actual centerline of the car (wherever it may be). Using some trig we can now fabricate a new line that is parrallel to cennterline (perpendicular to midplate). I would often do this along the left side of the car, then I could measure off that new parrallel line to line up my left side wheels. Setting your car at baseline, you can use these two lines, the midplate and the new left side parrallel line to measure almost any point in the chassis, checking rear trail, or left/right wheels in line... anything can be checked.

    Yes you should check indexing, and all the other set up items, this above can be used to check and verify items with the car. Also this may help if you ever bend the car in the future, or to find if it is bent.
    So what you are saying is the rear end and the engine plate sould be the parrallel to each other. If I set the rear end bars (including the J-bar) and ride heights are established, would the last thing to do would be to check/adjust the rear end against the motor plate. Am I correct???

  16. #16

    Default

    As far as squaring a rear end to the centerline, if u make 2 bars one front one rear equal distance off the centerline of the frt and rear of the car, then pull strings frt to rear at hub height!! This works really well \\ at the end of the day when u figure out what works u gotta be able to repeat that car to car, week to week!!

  17. #17
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    490

    Default

    Had 5 different brands of LM thru the years. Rayburn, Shaw, Warrior, GRT, Shiltz. All did it a little differently.

    Put it in by bar lengths like the builder says to do. That is his design and may, or may not, be square. I know cars with the rearend trailed on the RR from the start. I've had cars with the midplate not square to the rearend. MOst don't match left to right on the wheelbases. Some line up left side tires, some kick the LR out several inches. It all varies by builder.

    You need to be able to replicate what the builder intended more than the rearend being "square".

    If you want an easy, sure fire way to square a rearend drop me a PM.

    SPark

  18. #18
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    1,014

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ALF401 View Post
    So what you are saying is the rear end and the engine plate sould be the parrallel to each other. If I set the rear end bars (including the J-bar) and ride heights are established, would the last thing to do would be to check/adjust the rear end against the motor plate. Am I correct???
    The midplate should be true to the world... Rear end may or may not be. Some may run RR trail, you would find this by measuring this way. I would set as much up as I can from chassis builder, then check everything like I outlined to see and note if the rear is square or car should dog walk, also will give you measurements incase you crash.

    If you cannot reach a builder and have no sheets I would square the rear, line up lefts and tune from there.

  19. #19
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Posts
    138

    Default

    I run an 09 bwrc and the book Barry gave me at the seminar I went to days the cross member in front of the radiator is square to the rest of the car and to drop plumb bobs off the front of that bar on each side then run a string across the two strings hanging down out past the front tires and be sure it is tight. Then get about a foot and a half of 1/2 inch threaded rod and take the axle caps off and screw the threaded rod into the axles. The measure from that string to the rod on each side and that should give you your lead or trail on the reared. Also you can take the grease zerts out of the lower ball joints and screw small bolts in that hang down and measure from the string to that bolt and it will give you your lead on the front end. I run my lower ball joint on the rf about a quarter inch ahead of the lf. It seems to help it steer in a touch better.

  20. #20
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Posts
    491

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by EAMShater View Post
    I run an 09 bwrc and the book Barry gave me at the seminar I went to days the cross member in front of the radiator is square to the rest of the car and to drop plumb bobs off the front of that bar on each side then run a string across the two strings hanging down out past the front tires and be sure it is tight. Then get about a foot and a half of 1/2 inch threaded rod and take the axle caps off and screw the threaded rod into the axles. The measure from that string to the rod on each side and that should give you your lead or trail on the reared. Also you can take the grease zerts out of the lower ball joints and screw small bolts in that hang down and measure from the string to that bolt and it will give you your lead on the front end. I run my lower ball joint on the rf about a quarter inch ahead of the lf. It seems to help it steer in a touch better.
    That's the best advice i've seen yet.

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