LOL, I'm guessing you saw the pictures backed into the parking spot at my work with the tires cranked over? Almost comical right?
I'm at like 17 degrees of caster if I remember correctly. I'd always learned that looking from the side of your vehicle if you drew an imaginary line thru the center of your upper and lower ball joints you want that line to hit the ground right where the front contact patch of your tire is at the ground. Now lets go a bigger tire and lower pressures, you can kind of assume that contact patch just moved further forward. Now compensate for it in the dirt and that the tire sinks into the dirt and that point again just got moved further forward.
I was told this YEARS ago at different times by both Perry McNeil and John Emke at Autofab. I figure both those dudes have been around the block when it comes to building a good TTB setup.
Now with that said, my particular front end, I can't take credit for truly building the beams or the radius arms. I did modify both the beams and the radius arms sombe but what I did didn't effect the caster of how they were built. I do actually "believe" mine is a bit excessive.
Seat of the pants though, I can't tell anything negative from it. The tires for the most part are wearing pretty even and well. It drives straight as can be. At speed the steering feedback is good but not excessive. Crawling I don't notice anything out of the ordinary.
It definitely is visually shocking though when you see what my front end does in turns. The caster literally converts into camber when turning. When backing up, with how my steering is and if turning when backing up it sets into a toe'd in scenario so the front kinda squats and widens and it really exaggerates the amount the tires roll over.
Is it right or wrong? ehhhh, gut feeling I should be more in th 10-12 degree range but like I said, other then visual, I'm not noticing any negative effects and really have no complaints. If I had to list my complaints on my explorer as it sits right now...
- Low range isn't low enough
- front approach angle limits me on some waterfall climbs
- rear leafs need to go to deaver to get an additional 2" of ride height
- rockers are too low in comparison to jeeps (can't do much about that though)
Really that's it... Atlas would fix the 1st, I'm back and forth on if a custom bumper will really get me the clearance I want on the 2nd,
#3 will probably happen later this summer,
#4 , well it is what it is, my rockers were built knowing they'd get abused. LOL