SkylineDriven wrote:In defense of Nismostate... how would DIY be any different from the shops that still do manual alignments... some of the old schoolers REFUSE to buy Hunter machines for their shop (Hunter is the best alignment machinery on the market that I know of).
Some shops just use mirrors, leveler/guages, strings, rulers, and pencils to align and I know for a fact that at least one of those shops even brags about how they can align just as good as a machine can.
What I've been saying is that you CAN get basically as accurate as a $200k Hunter Laser Alignment machine with just a piece of string, a GOOD ruler, paitence and most importantly, know-how.
I think the original poster is looking at this as a "quick and cheap fix" to getting an alignment at a shop. Honestly, it really isn't after having done quite a few DIY alignments. You can do it fairly inexpensively, but it will be very time consuming to get accurate results.
I encourage nismostate to pursue this if he's still set on DIY alignments, but he didn't even know what toe is or how to measure it, which is about as basic as it gets on alignments. If he tried to do a DIY alignment right now, he'd be in WAY over his head, even if he tried to follow my quick write-up I posted up(which everybody seems to be glossing over, it tells you EXACTLY what you need to do to align your car). You guys still seem to think alignments have to do with smoke and mirrors, and are actually recognizing what an alignment shop is adjusting, and how you can emulate this adjustment to your desired specs without an expensive machine.
I'll probably do a quick DIY alignment on my car before it gets the "full suspension job" - but at the end I'm going to get a good race shop to help me set up a more streetable setup, then a more track friendly setup.