2012.01.30 - UPDATE! - UNIMOG 404 HISTORY LESSON....
I was caught off-guard a couple days ago.
Reading through a bunch of old UniMog 404 documentation a saw a spec for the front axle that seemed odd, but didn't fully process what it would mean in my build. The Germans in their infinite wisdom decided to build the front axle with what appears to be 1.75* of POSITIVE camber in the front knuckles, and make it non-adjustable
Here is the spec:
.....and here is the effect visually. Highlighted in red to make it more obvious.
You can see that with almost 2 degrees of positive camber on the knuckles the tires have a pronounced "wedge" look \-----/
According to the Unimog historians I've been able to find, this was done deliberately for several reasons. The trucks were designed to carry heavy loads, and they rode on bias-ply tires. The paved roads back in the 60s had a substantial crown to them as well. All of these factors would lead to "wandering" of the vehicle if the camber was not set to a positive value.
In any case, the look is horrible. It reminds me of a lifted VW Beetle with a swingaxle rear end.

There are ways to correct it, but you need to be careful which parts you modify since the axleshafts were designed to work properly with this angle designed-in.
For that reason, you can't simply machine the axle flange and bolt the Inner-C to it. The seal and bearing would end up with 2* of misalignment and would never spin freely afterwards. Guys have tried it... it was a FAIL.
So the answer is to make the adjustment in the CV-area where you have support for angularity anyway.
Here's an example of the plate that can be used to build an angled shim...
In this photo, top is top, and bottom is bottom when installed on the axle. Since the camber is POSITIVE, the bottom of this plate needs to get thicker to push the tires outward at the ground, and effectively pull them in at the top.
I bolted the plate into position and threw about .375" worth of washers under the bottommost bolt holes, and got this...
As you can see in this photo, the angle gauge shows that I actually got about 1* of NEGATIVE camber into the front end now, effectively dialing-out all of the positive camber...plus a bit more!
I like this a LOT.
So, now it's up to Scott (4X4HIGH) to come through for me (again) with another huge favor



, and help me to get a set of these plates CNC'ed... it seems like it's doable, the question as always is how long will it take, and what's it going to cost me?!
-G