Positive Camber Impossible?

Remember too that the ride height of the car alters the suspension geometry. So, just because one car can get a couple of degrees of positive caster with stock bushings doesn't mean yours can if it's not sitting at the same height.

This is VERY important if the OP's tires are smaller than the original bias plys - and if those are 13" rims I see, they probably are.

This wouldn't matter if we had non-adjustable coil springs on our cars, but the adjustable torsion bars give the alignment jockeys yet another thing to fool with that they generally get wrong. With the smaller tires, they'll likely adjust the ride height too high, assuming the stock ride height given in the manual (which measures the inner LCA pivot at the K frame to the ground - which applies only when the tire sidewall is the same as what the factory expected).

Now you've got the LCA's jacked downwards an inch or two more than they should be - the inch or two lost with the smaller 13" P185/70 (or P175/70) radials available today. That inch or two is mirrored by the UCA's, which also move the upper ball joint forward as they pivot down, which moves the spindle/kingpin forward to match. That eats up whatever caster you had to work with in the first place.



And between the reduction in caster and the smaller tire, you get less trail. The result is a twitchy front end that'll hunt lanes with the slightest twitch at the wheel, and won't center itself when you make a tight turn.



-Kurt