MatthewBasaraba
Jerry Rigger
There has been lots of discussion on this topic, so rehashing everything is kind of 

BUT recently I had made a post with my spindles and was shot down by its angles.
Now I have had several people point me to THIS site for geometry of Castor, Camber and Acker.
Quote on Castor..."In practice, many people settle for angles between 20 and 25 degrees."
Quote on Camber..."Generally this angle is between 10 degrees and 12 degrees, and to allow the wheels to stand flat on the floor, is offset by a similar angle on the stub axle."
So I built mine with 20 degrees of Castor and 10 Degrees of Camber. The statement replied to me is, with 20 degrees of Castor this kart will never turn. I made reference to the site posted and never got a reply. IMO, if you are going to shoot something down, bring some facts and offer advice from experience on how it SHOULD be.
Since this person has failed to follow up, can anyone offer insight on why this was wrong and what to do to improve it?
Picture of my spindle plus fixture.


BUT recently I had made a post with my spindles and was shot down by its angles.Now I have had several people point me to THIS site for geometry of Castor, Camber and Acker.
Quote on Castor..."In practice, many people settle for angles between 20 and 25 degrees."
Quote on Camber..."Generally this angle is between 10 degrees and 12 degrees, and to allow the wheels to stand flat on the floor, is offset by a similar angle on the stub axle."
So I built mine with 20 degrees of Castor and 10 Degrees of Camber. The statement replied to me is, with 20 degrees of Castor this kart will never turn. I made reference to the site posted and never got a reply. IMO, if you are going to shoot something down, bring some facts and offer advice from experience on how it SHOULD be.
Since this person has failed to follow up, can anyone offer insight on why this was wrong and what to do to improve it?
Picture of my spindle plus fixture.
