
Originally Posted by
Celtoid
I don’t think anybody has ever mentioned or knows this and it could be pure conjecture on my part.
During normal operation the car tries to level relative to the surface that its sitting on. Is that correct?
In order for TTM to get as close to the null point as possible, it would have to be effectively referencing to itself (car), regardless of the terrain, wouldn’t it?
Which practically means when movement is forced to stop by means other than TTM you could have all 4 legs as much as 20mm from the null point, in either direction I suppose .... with a total potential complete separation of 40mm between two wheels. That can’t be great for the wheel alignment.
This thought has only occurred to me and it maybe completely wrong LOL!!!
Thoughts?
You're overthinking this Celtoid.
We're talking wheel alignment here and you're not going to attempt that half way across a paddock. At some stage before the wheel alignment, and this could be miles away perhaps, you set the suspension to TTL. There'll be a warning on the dash that the car is not in customer mode or something but the car will drive to the alignment place quite OK. At the aligners they will place the car on a supposedly level surface and the car will level itself to within 3mm of spec at each corner. It should then be sitting as perfectly level as it can. It will adjust itself as the driver exits or whatever. Thus the alignment will be as accurate as possible.
After the alignment, reset it back to normal mode.
I make sure I have the main tank full and auxiliary tank half full and that the car is loaded with what I normally have in it before doing an alignment.
2013 D4 expedition equipped
1966 Army workshop trailer
(previously SII 2.25 swb, SIII 2.25 swb & lwb, P38 Vogue, 1993 LSE 3.9V8 then HS2.8)
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