Dude: Sorry for the confusion, the cut is on the side then when you weld the 2 pieces together you end up with 15mm longer eye to eye measurement and the 45 degree weld is much stronger.
I already stated my reasons for running max pressure on my car it's 1800+ Kg's and I drive aggressively and my car generates a genuine .99G before it slips, my tire wear is brilliant with NO additional wear in the centre of the contact patch then only downside or negative is the ride is somewhat...
That there is an even more epic fail :nono:
How about taking from the experience to maybe have 1 less drink in the same time frame rather than feel like a victim and think of an alternate route...
A journal bearing Turbo needs Oil pressure as the bearing "floats" you have a clearence between the shaft and the bearing and another between the bearing and the centre housing, once under pressure the shaft and wheels as long as they're in balance stay suspended in the middle of the housings...
Ok not to put too harsh a spin on this but what relevence does a sticker printed in the 1980's have to modern tires?
really think about it..
Read the side of the tire it will tell you the safe maximum inflation pressure anything OVER that is overinflated.
I got another pair of lower transverse arms cut my stock ones on a 45 degree angle then cut the spares on the same angle leaving an axtra 15mm on the short ends then welded them back together, this puts my cams back in the middle of their adjustment range.
With stock arms you can either have...
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