ShadowsPapa
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Bill
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2019
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- 247
- Messages
- 40,449
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- 53,885
- Location
- Runnells, Iowa
- Vehicle(s)
- '25 JTMX, '23 JLU 4xe, '82 SX4, '73 Javelin
- Occupation
- Retired auto mechanic, frmr gov't ntwrk security admin
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- 3
So was ZJ and I believe WJ was likely 7Stock TJ caster is 7 degrees.
Will look up camber as well.
The solid axle Grand Cherokees had 7 degrees caster, OK range was 6.5 to 7.5.
They steered fine, tracked nicely, wheel returned to center about like the JT does. They were great highway vehicles and not so bad in town, either.
And that's less than a few IFS cars which come in at 4.75 with a range extending higher than that. A tall, square, flat-sided truck - sort of interesting that the caster spec is lower than some cars.JT castor should be 4.5. But people extend that to 5 to control that wander. It shouldnt have to be touched on a stock JT.
Think of it - WJ, ZH, TJ, 7 with a top of 7.5 and the JT is 2.5 to 3 degrees less than that.
5 is where a number of other trucks have been as I recall.
I can see reduced caster for a longer wheelbase vehicle than the short Jeeps or even some SUVs but that's a fair drop.
I'll see if I can find my other JT specs (camber, etc.) and go from there.
Now here's the fun part (for me, anyway). I collect TSMs for cars I'm interested in. Even more fun is the later supplements and addendums.
Take one of those cars to an alignment shop and they have the spec, right there from the factory, exactly as published in the original documentation. The problem with that is that in no small number of cases, the engineers later CHANGED those specs - and you see the updated specs in the supplements and addendums to the TSM - but no one ever bought or used those so the shop will align to the original, incorrect specs.
I've even printed pages from the updated service specs and handed them to shops only to get a car back with the alignment set to the original release specs - wrong.
What should that tell people? When a vehicle is released - they release specs that are suitable with all of the information available at that time. After a vehicle hits the streets, they get more information, there's more internal testing and changes and updates, and they release new, updated specs.
The JT is a newer vehicle - I'd not be shocked to see new specs come out for some things. I'm not saying they will, or that there's even a great chance - just saying - I've seen it before, so no surprise. It may be the face of a Wrangler, but the ass is a truck.
We may hit 2024 model year with the exact same parts and specs. Maybe not. Changes have happened before - and even before a model year was completed.
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