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  2. Toe (automotive) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toe_(automotive)

    Toe is usually adjustable in production automobiles, even though caster angle and camber angle are often not adjustable. Maintenance of front-end alignment, which used to involve all three adjustments, currently involves only setting the toe; in most cases, even for a car in which caster or camber are adjustable, only the toe will need ...

  3. Wheel alignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheel_alignment

    There are usually four camera units in a wheel alignment system (a camera unit for each wheel). The camera units communicate their physical positioning with respect to other camera units to a central computer, which calculates and displays. [2] Often with alignment equipment, these "heads" can be a large precision reflector.

  4. Caster angle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caster_angle

    Caster angle and trail both influence the steering, albeit in different ways: caster tends to add damping, while trail adds "feel" and returnability. The caster wheel on shopping carts are an extreme case – the system is undamped but stable, as the wheel oscillates around the "correct" path. The construction has relatively high trail, but no ...

  5. Camber angle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camber_angle

    Camber angle alters the handling qualities of some suspension designs; in particular, negative camber improves grip in corners especially with a short long arms suspension. This is because it places the tire at a better angle to the road, transmitting the centrifugal forces through the vertical plane of the tire rather than through a shear ...

  6. Lamborghini Tests Active Camber and Toe Control for Better ...

    www.aol.com/lamborghini-tests-active-camber-toe...

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  7. Ackermann steering geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ackermann_steering_geometry

    This was achieved by making the linkage not a simple parallelogram, but by making the length of the track rod (the moving link between the hubs) shorter than that of the axle, so that the steering arms of the hubs appeared to "toe out". As the steering moved, the wheels turned according to Ackermann, with the inner wheel turning further. [3]