You can set camber yourself very easily without special equipment. Lay a long spirit level butt end on the concrete , tight next to the tyre. Then lean the top towards the tyre wall -- where it touches , mark with chalk and measure from chalk to ground -- it may measure say 560mm's. Lean the spirit level out at the top(keeping the bottom touching the tyre wall) ----------- stop and measure from spirit level to chalk mark , when the bubble shows vertical . It may be say - 10mm's .
Now you have values to work out what in mm's 1 degree is equal to. Treat the 560mm's as the radius of a circle , then using the circumference of a circle formula of 2 pi R (2 x 22 div 7 x radius), you will get a figure of 3519.04 mm's. One quarter of this figure will represent the approximate 90 degrees/quarter circle between ground and upright wheel tyre .
Now 1/4 of that is 879.76mm's . Divide that by 90(as in degrees) and you get 9.775mm's is 1 degree ------------------- easy.
That's it ---- so 1.5 degrees negative will need a measurement from spirit level to chalk mark of 14.662mm's .
Once the picture is in your head of a circle , with the concrete floor to tyre right angle representing 1/4 circle , it will seem a doddle. I worked this method out myself when being too mean to buy the special equipment for setting up race cars. A friend with that equipment used for a circuit racer , checked my set up , assuming it couldn't possibly be accurate . After doing it twice he said , '' bloody hell it's spot on Rob '' TRY IT
