• Sign Up! To view all forums and unlock additional cool features

    Welcome to the #1 Fiesta ST Forum and Fiesta ST community dedicated to Fiesta ST owners and enthusiasts. Register for an account, it's free and it's easy, so don't hesitate to join the Fiesta ST Forum today!


DIY Rear Camber Plates???

Messages
206
Likes
108
Location
Santa Rosa
#1
Has any anyone created a file/template for their own rear camber plate which mount behind the wheel hub? Looks like an Italian vendor (DNA) came up with a set and looks fairly easy to have someone make if you got the design files and life stateside.
 


Woods247

2000 Post Club
Messages
2,527
Likes
4,401
Location
Atl
#2
Has any anyone created a file/template for their own rear camber plate which mount behind the wheel hub? Looks like an Italian vendor (DNA) came up with a set and looks fairly easy to have someone make if you got the design files and life stateside.
I haven’t found any. Please let us know if you do.
 


D1JL

7000 Post Club
Staff Member
Premium Account
U.S. Navy Veteran
Messages
7,832
Likes
4,072
Location
SFV, So.Cal.
#7
Those would be pretty easy to fabricate. its just sheetmetal or stamped steel.
The hard part is the fact is that it is a wedge.
The bottom needs to be about 0.030" thicker than the top.
That is very difficult to do.



BTW: 0.030" will give you about 1° negative, great for street use without too much tire ware.

Dave
 


Dpro

6000 Post Club
Messages
6,189
Likes
5,828
Location
Los Feliz (In the City of Angels)
#8
The hard part is the fact is that it is a wedge.
The bottom needs to be about 0.030" thicker than the top.
That is very difficult to do.



BTW: 0.030" will give you about 1° negative, great for street use without too much tire ware.

Dave
Ya but we live in area full of ex amd current aerospace machine shops. I know for a fact I could get something like that waterjetted or cnc’d if I felt the market was large enough.
 


D1JL

7000 Post Club
Staff Member
Premium Account
U.S. Navy Veteran
Messages
7,832
Likes
4,072
Location
SFV, So.Cal.
#9
Ya but we live in area full of ex amd current aerospace machine shops. I know for a fact I could get something like that waterjetted or cnc’d if I felt the market was large enough.
You may be correct however, the cost puts the part at about $150.00 per set.
In addition they are illegal in sanctioned racing events.
I looked into this years ago when I made my set.
Water Jet and CNC prices have gone up since then.
You are better off just buying the ones listed above while they are still available.

Good luck.


Dave
 


Woods247

2000 Post Club
Messages
2,527
Likes
4,401
Location
Atl
#10
Ya but we live in area full of ex amd current aerospace machine shops. I know for a fact I could get something like that waterjetted or cnc’d if I felt the market was large enough.
You build and I’ll test it. The shims I used f’d up the ABS sensors so I had to remove them. I have washers pushing out the bottom of the hubs now. It’s ghetto but it works. I’d rather have a proper plate like this though. What’s the number that makes this worth your time?
 


D1JL

7000 Post Club
Staff Member
Premium Account
U.S. Navy Veteran
Messages
7,832
Likes
4,072
Location
SFV, So.Cal.
#11
You build and I’ll test it. The shims I used f’d up the ABS sensors so I had to remove them. I have washers pushing out the bottom of the hubs now. It’s ghetto but it works. I’d rather have a proper plate like this though. What’s the number that makes this worth your time?
That too is part of the problem.
I want through a few sets until I got them correct and the ABS wheel sensor worked and the whole thing was a Plug-N-Play.

This is why making the wedge is critical and very expensive to do.
I am not even sure that the above mentioned set works with the ABS sensor as it was originally designed for racing purposes.

I did come up with a way to make the part but the cost of making the tool fixture also required the selling of a large quantity of them.
Now that the FiST has been discontinued, it is not worth it.



Dave
 


koozy

3000 Post Club
Messages
3,209
Likes
1,889
Location
Los Angeles, CA, USA
#12
Why not just buy the DNA set, it’s roughly $125 shipped. Worth the time in trying to DIY.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 


D1JL

7000 Post Club
Staff Member
Premium Account
U.S. Navy Veteran
Messages
7,832
Likes
4,072
Location
SFV, So.Cal.
#13
Why not just buy the DNA set, it’s roughly $125 shipped. Worth the time in trying to DIY.


That's what I said.
From the experience of making mine, it is not worth making them yourself.



Dave
 


OP
HAHAFiST
Messages
206
Likes
108
Location
Santa Rosa
Thread Starter #14
That's what I said.
From the experience of making mine, it is not worth making them yourself.



Dave
Dave,

I’m with you. Buy the DNA set. Also, I’m observing what else is going on in your photo.... end link? Care to share more photos of your rear suspension set up? I’m liking what I see!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 


D1JL

7000 Post Club
Staff Member
Premium Account
U.S. Navy Veteran
Messages
7,832
Likes
4,072
Location
SFV, So.Cal.
#15
Dave,

I’m with you. Buy the DNA set. Also, I’m observing what else is going on in your photo.... end link? Care to share more photos of your rear suspension set up? I’m liking what I see!

Not to hijack this thread, please check out my mod photos, then we can discuss things on my build page.
Links, below.

Dave
 


Dpro

6000 Post Club
Messages
6,189
Likes
5,828
Location
Los Feliz (In the City of Angels)
#16
You may be correct however, the cost puts the part at about $150.00 per set.
In addition they are illegal in sanctioned racing events.
I looked into this years ago when I made my set.
Water Jet and CNC prices have gone up since then.
You are better off just buying the ones listed above while they are still available.

Good luck.


Dave
Who were you talking too? Lol I can make a call to my cnc guy tomorrow . Get me the dimensions of yours . I was doing runs of heat shields for engine mounts and for $160 I could probably get multiples .
 


jeffreylyon

1000 Post Club
Premium Account
Messages
1,320
Likes
1,115
Location
Pittsburgh
#17
Who were you talking too? Lol I can make a call to my cnc guy tomorrow . Get me the dimensions of yours . I was doing runs of heat shields for engine mounts and for $160 I could probably get multiples .
It's not a flat piece of stock, it's milled or ground at a ~ 1º angle and is quite thin to avoid too much offset. If your guy is willing to cut more than 1 for $160 then I'd like his number - I'll send all sorts of work his way.
 


Dpro

6000 Post Club
Messages
6,189
Likes
5,828
Location
Los Feliz (In the City of Angels)
#18
It's not a flat piece of stock, it's milled or ground at a ~ 1º angle and is quite thin to avoid too much offset. If your guy is willing to cut more than 1 for $160 then I'd like his number - I'll send all sorts of work his way.
Indeed its ground. I was having a discussion about it last night with a machinest friend.
 


kivnul

1000 Post Club
U.S. Army Veteran
Messages
1,193
Likes
711
Location
Deer Park, WA
#19
In for updates. Anyone have details on how this screws with the ABS? I am not familiar with how that works.
 


Woods247

2000 Post Club
Messages
2,527
Likes
4,401
Location
Atl
#20
In for updates. Anyone have details on how this screws with the ABS? I am not familiar with how that works.
I haven’t used these but I’ve used adjustable shims. They moved the ABS sensor too far away from the tone ring so you have to fab brackets to try to slide the sensor closer. We couldn’t get it to work correctly and I ended up frying a sensor by pushing it too close to the tone ring. They’re cheap, but the car will limp on track with damaged sensors. At least my 14 did..
 




Top