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If you’re referring to my comment…my comment stems from his remarks he made on Facebook in which he said a lady at the alignment shop of his choosing said one was not needed.I think he is more referring to tired scrub then self alignment. When you lift a vehicle(like with a jack) the camber changes with suspensions travel, when you put it back down its still not fully scrubed. This is simply due to the stiction of the tires, and the fact that the suspension cycles on a radius. This will keep the vehicle higher than actual ride height, after driving the vehicle the suspension will scrub and be back to static height causing the camber to come back in. You will definetly need an alignment after doing the lift though.
Looking good! Did the lift change anything driving wise?Here it is as promised.
FordRangerLifts 2” lift kit with 235/75-17 Falken Wildpeak AT3W’s. 31” tires.
As noted by other people with lifted truck the rear tire does sit forward in the wheel well. But it’s an optical illusion as to how close. There is at least 3” between the fender and tire towards the front of the rear wheel well. Took some close ups.
Also when you first do a lift kit the tires camber in on the tops, out on the bottom in the front after you set it back on the ground.
Don’t freak out like I did!
As soon as you drive the Maverick after the lift the tires straightens out on its own.
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The main thing is the rear diff. Tires and lifts will only take you so far. No idea if ford is planning on making available the dual clutch rear diff they put in the bronco sport, but it could certainly work since it's basically the same drive train.Thanks for the pictures and write-up. I think with the dark truck the rear wheel off-center does not look as pronounced. It is a nice stance with those wild peaks...
I know it's been said a lot that this truck will not be a serious off-road truck but I suspect there is still a lot we can do to improve the off-road capabilities.
With such a low upfront cost of ownership, it will be a popular model for custom work. It will be interesting to see what offerings are available down the road.
I was referencing your comment to what the OP stated to hopefully clarify what is going on (to the OP).If you’re referring to my comment…my comment stems from his remarks he made on Facebook in which he said a lady at the alignment shop of his choosing said one was not needed.
Yeah just based on doing 1" spacers on mine with 30.5" tires and seeing the end results, I'm confident there's no way his truck is aligned to spec lolI was referencing your comment to what the OP stated to hopefully clarify what is going on (to the OP).
Its possible that it was within factory specs, albeit, on the edge. Also possible it was "close enough" and they were just being lazy haha.
Sometimes you also dont have adjustment for caster/camber, but usually still requires a "toe and go".
You are wrong. Objectively, and without any further discussion, WRONG! Moron ...