Hi Dan I have fibreglass legs and my axle stubs bolt directly to the legs. Therefore the shims may squash into (wear into) the leg so I put flox behind the axle to give a better mating surface. If I was bolting metal to metal I would not waste my time with flox (the automotive industry has been shimming wheel alignments for decades with great success :-)
Regards Barry -----Original Message----- From: krnet-bounces+kr2=bigpond....@mylist.net [mailto:krnet-bounces+kr2=bigpond....@mylist.net] On Behalf Of Dan Heath Sent: Saturday, 27 June 2009 7:25 PM To: 'KRnet' Subject: RE: KR> Progress Report Barry, I did the flox on my camber, and am doing the caster, but am wondering if the flox is really necessary. I know it makes a nice full shim, but it runs all over the place while it is curing. I thought I had just dreamed this up and was the only one doing it. Do you know if this is an accepted method, and what the flox contributes to the process? See N64KR at http://KRBuilder.org - Then click on the pics See you at the 2009 - KR Gathering in Mt. Vernon, Ill There is a time for building and a time for FLYING and the time for Flying has begun. Daniel R. Heath - Lexington, SC