took my super bee for alignment and its awful. they have tried 3 times and going back tomorrow. they are replacing front tires because they are eat up. the sad thing is it drove good before taking it. i was just doing general upkeep and balancing tires and this is what happened. they have replaced lower control arm bushings and one ball joint. it still squeals front tires and darts around...it also sits higher now. anybody else ever have this happen and possible causes thanks
This combination of issues (and the lack of problems previous to the trip to the shop) has me convinced that your torsion bars were tightened too much. As a secondary effect, this also reduces the amount of available caster in the suspension geometry. Both combined result in the same lack of self-centering often associated with improper toe-in adjustment.
I also have a hunch your front tires are smaller in overall diameter than what the car came with. Not that the smaller tires themselves are an issue, but you're almost guaranteed to get your front end jacked up in the air from any "read the specs and set it without thinking" alignment shop if the tires are smaller - even if you have them dial in the correct caster and camber for radials.
This may not make sense at first glance, but read on:
Mopar suspension adjustments are made with ride height (a.k.a. the torsion bars) adjusted FIRST, by measuring and setting the distance between the
bottom of the control arm to the ground.
Naturally, if the new tire is either smaller or larger than what the factory originally intended, this measurement should decrease or increase, respectively.
However, instead of working in this difference before fooling with the suspension, most shops just jack up the torsion bars to whatever the factory measurement is (mostly out of ignorance, it's only "because of liability" if anyone asks; a statement grounded in ignorance in itself). Whatever the case, if your tires are smaller in diameter, your suspension will now be extended in travel more than it needs to be, and getting proper caster and camber won't help much because of the overextended control arm geometry.
What to do before you go to the alignment shop: Find out the difference in your tire diameter from what that Bee had when original. Take old diameter, subtract new diameter. Divide result by two, then take that result and subtract it from the factory torsion bar height measurement for a stock ride height. Use that as a baseline torsion bar measurement, and pair it with the caster and camber of your choice from that suspension chart that everybody posts here now and then (and always on the A-Body forum).
Then take these measurements and drum it into your alignment shop's Mopar-ignorant skulls until they set it to these specifications. And if they won't, find a shop that will, then test drive it. You should be pleasantly surprised.
-Kurt
P.S.: You don't hear this out of Ford and Chebby guys with coilovers, because shops don't have the opportunity to make a ride height adjustment on these suspensions. I bet weird things happen at alignment shops with Ford Rangers though...