Bob & Ray,
Sorry ... I'm an engineer. Ray, you gave Bob the following as a possible solution to his camber problem:
Bob, For the rear, you have two choices. Get the 18mm pads again, (cha-ching$) or cut a linear inch off of the spring rod. A little shortening of the coil will go a long way so don't get carried away. If you have progressive springs be sure to do that from the end of the spring with the wider coil spacing.
When you cut the overall length of the spring you increase it's stiffness AND consequently for the loads being carried (dynamic loads) this increases the stress on the metal rod, therefore brings the spring material closer to it's yield limit & fatigue life.
At Curb wt, the spring will compress slightly less than before it was cut, so the net difference in curb height will be not be by how much the spring ht was cut, but will be that much LESS the reduction in compressed ht at curb wt. For an approx. example, if you're cutting enough off the spring's ht (unloaded spring) to reduce the total windings by 1/2 of a turn (say 1/2 inch off spring height), the deflection at curb wt will be reduced by about 1/8th inch.... therefore the NET reduction will be 3/8ths inch rather than 1/2 inch. This is a very approx. example just to illustrate the problem, since the actual values will depend on precisely what material the spring's made of, how many total turns it has before cutting it, & the rod diameter (and the curb wt, which I assumed for this example was 500 lbs on each spring at curb wt.)
Point is that there are some significant caveats to cutting the springs.. not the least of which is the increase in stress on the spring, a reduction in load to yield (permanent deformation), not to mention a reduction in fatigue life (the latter may not be an issue if the car's not driven a lot anyway, especially on rougher roads or on lot's of curves).
Kentucky windage, huh? When I was in Army we had some boys who used Kentucky Windage at the shooting range the 1st couple of sessions... sorry to say they couldn't score a passing mark until they started using the rules (distance to target with x clicks on the sight, not to mention some other things). That was with some modified M1's in those days during Basic Training. It wasn't that they couldn't hit the mark... it was that they had to take at least 5 shots before they homed in on it... in that time the "enemy" target would have either ducked for cover or shot back. I will add, however, that the Kentucky Windage guys were better than everybody else in our company the 1st 2 sessions... after that though, the guys who'ed never had a carbine in their hands before actually scored the best in the end.
Being an engineer, I'm a tad bit biased though.
Longtooth
67 250SL US #113-043-10-002163
'02 SL500 Sport