OK, installed Jeff's spacers. Still waiting on rear Doetsch for rear end; found out I have to grind a bit off the flange at the lower mount, and the brake line hits it a bit. No biggie. Kind of tight in lower bracket, but it'll work.
My problem is the front and the OEM struts. The camber is way off, of course. These struts, behind the two lower bolts, have a U-shaped piece of metal between the holes where the spindle bolts insert. Most struts I've seen have one U-shaped piece that wraps the outside of the shock body and then has holes. To set camber you have to grind/drill slots. But because of this extra U shaped piece that fits on the other side of the shock body, inside the first U-shaped flange, you can't push the knuckle very far in, even with slots. Only a few MM. I need more; a seat of the pants camber measurement puts me at about 1.5 deg positive (and eyeballing to the rear wheel confirms). This is with 30.5" wheels on 1" spacers; I thought the extra extension, etc might settle it just a bit more.
So...options? I could drill/grind the bottom bolt hole to slot it, but that means removing metal and making that outer part thinner...not what I wanna do I think. I can't really grind that U piece; it's pretty thing and I might hit the body. And grinding the knuckle doesn't seem good either.
So...what about KYB struts? they don't seem to have that objectionable U piece, so I could extend the slots. Bit stiffer I suppose.
Or is 1.5 deg positive camber anything to worry about? I looked at a 4x4 truck and it seemed to have a bit of positive camber as well. But trucks usually have a wider front than rear. This vehicle is not a daily driver (99 Tracker); it has aggressive tires and is set up for towing to offroad areas.
I am used to maximizing negative camber on the track and autox. But I also remember sand buggies based on VWs that had tons of positive camber. So do tractors. It makes it easier to turn, but is pushy and at extremes feels like turning a front motorcycle wheel too much. But under compression it is also more neutral (which is why the lift put it out to positive, duh).
It also seems, since I'm talking myself into leaving the positive camber, that maybe I should add a bit of toe in, since that discourages turning. Or maybe I'm just overthinking all of this....
Rob