Installing K-Mac Rear Camber and Toe Bushings
I do not think the K-Mac bushings are stiffer than stock. The stock ones almost have no rubber - it is almost all metal and very stiff. The K-Macs are also plenty stiff and should be fine even under track use, as per my tuner (who is an experienced racer himself).

I do not think the K-Mac bushings are stiffer than stock. The stock ones almost have no rubber - it is almost all metal and very stiff. The K-Macs are also plenty stiff and should be fine even under track use, as per my tuner (who is an experienced racer himself).
I am pretty close to pulling the trigger on a set of the rear bushings and the front plates...








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Anyone know where I could source the washers from locally?




i bought Jims camber kit and I have the V3s now as well. When lowering the car im getting rubbing on the outside fenders with my new setup. Will the kit help with this? Right now my numbers are 2.6 front neg camber and rear is 1.9 neg in the rear. I want to run 2.0 and 1.5 for the street but having issues with tire rub in the rear. Also what kit is it by the way. I must be missing something. Thanks in advance.
Here is a link: http://k-mac.com/product/mercedes-w2...shing-502226k/
I just set my rear cambers at -1* 30' (1.5*neg) and still have toe adjustment of 1/16" per side. If you try to go any lower you will run out of toe adjustment and need to install the toe bushings that come with the kit. So far I haven't bothered installing the toe bushings. No reason really just haven't bothered fussing with them.




Here is a link: http://k-mac.com/product/mercedes-w2...shing-502226k/
I just set my rear cambers at -1* 30' (1.5*neg) and still have toe adjustment of 1/16" per side. If you try to go any lower you will run out of toe adjustment and need to install the toe bushings that come with the kit. So far I haven't bothered installing the toe bushings. No reason really just haven't bothered fussing with them.
Last edited by Mazspeed; Jan 27, 2018 at 12:49 AM.




Anyone know where I could source the washers from locally?
One thing I am sure of is that Kevin will be more than willing to work with you on resolving this issue and supplying you with new parts. One thing about K-MAC and Kevin is that he supplies excellent customer support and will modify parts on the fly if need be. Unfortunately you will have to wait for the parts to arrive but Kevin will send them the fastest way he can. Good luck getting your squeak eliminated and your car back in service.




Hey Mort. Thanks for the write up. Right now the car is 3/4 lower front and rear and my current camber is -2.6 in the front and -1.9 in the rear. And I am rubbing on the drivers side rear. I’ll post a photo later, but I am aiming for -2.0 front and -1.5 rear. At the current height I can’t go less than -1.9 in the rear so I think these Kmac parts will help. The shop I am using is also looking into these fixes as well. They maintain that the rubbing might not be able to be fixed because these is so little to trim and the plastic liner would fall out. It does look as if the rubbing on the top center of the wheel arch. How have you liked the setup so far? Thanks for the advise.
I have the front camber/caster bushings and top plates (street not race version) and the rear camber/toe bushings.
I have had the rear bushings installed for two years on my 2012 and about 7720 Km (4825 miles) without issue. My rear camber adjusted down from - 2* 55' to - 1* 35' and there is a little more adjustment left but not much. That and reduced rear toe-in should help a little with rear tire wear.
I have had the front top plates installed for two years and 7720 Km as well. I have had an issue with the left front top bushing but not sure if it is something with my car or an install issue. I think part of the issue is not being able to get the proper torque on the nut on top of the KW strut. I will work with Kevin to sort it out and Kevin was more than obliging to supply me with more bushings.
I just installed the front camber/caster bushings so that I could lower my front camber. I am not expecting to have any issues with these as they worked perfectly fine on my 2010. I have the top plates for camber adjustment as well but will use them to fine tune my settings. I installed the top plates for maximum negative camber and now wish I had them the other orientation but they will be fine this way for now. I could not use them to reduce front camber settings anyway as the tires would have rubbed on the fender lips and I do not want to try to roll my front fenders. I did that on my 2010 and it did not work out satisfactorily. I was able to adjust my front camber from around -3* to -1*55' . I think this setting will work well on the street and help a little with tire wear. I have not run them on the street yet so I cannot give you any impressions at this point. They did however work very well on my 2010 but set at around -3* camber.
If you are going to try to use the top plates to lower your front camber make sure you install them in the correct orientation for that purpose, you have to swap them from one side to the other. There may be a small adjustment you can make to the top plate as well by grinding some material off. It was in another thread or send Kevin an email and he will be able to help with that and how to ensure you get them installed on the correct side of the car for your purposes. I found the picture he sent in the instructions a little hard to decipher, as to the orientation of the top plates for maximum positive or negative adjustment purposes. Not really sure how much adjustment you will be able to achieve, in reducing the front camber settings, using the top plates alone.
I am not sure how you will stop the rubbing in the right rear. If you do end up grinding the rear lips (for a very little gain) and the fender liner starts to droop you can drill a hole through it into the inner fender (be careful not to go through the quarter panel in the process) and use body fasteners to hold the liner up in place. I have a few in my BS liners, in my HMS flares, holding it out of harms way. They are black plastic fasteners with thin flat tops about 3/4" in diameter and fuzzy stems to hold them in place. Any good body shop should be able to help with this if no one else is brash enough to do it. Make sure the guys check the metal brace at the bumper/quarter panel joint as I think it is a common place for tires to rub on dips. Maybe as a last resort mill a few mm off the hub on your wheels if there is enough meat on them. I am sure you know more the risks vs rewards of doing this than me but I have seen it mentioned several times. Keep safe.
Sorry for writing a book but I hope it helps out.
Last edited by Mort; Jan 27, 2018 at 12:58 PM. Reason: Mill hubs?








I have the front camber/caster bushings and top plates (street not race version) and the rear camber/toe bushings.
I have had the rear bushings installed for two years on my 2012 and about 7720 Km (4825 miles) without issue. My rear camber adjusted down from - 2* 55' to - 1* 35' and there is a little more adjustment left but not much. That and reduced rear toe-in should help a little with rear tire wear.
I have had the front top plates installed for two years and 7720 Km as well. I have had an issue with the left front top bushing but not sure if it is something with my car or an install issue. I think part of the issue is not being able to get the proper torque on the nut on top of the KW strut. I will work with Kevin to sort it out and Kevin was more than obliging to supply me with more bushings.
I just installed the front camber/caster bushings so that I could lower my front camber. I am not expecting to have any issues with these as they worked perfectly fine on my 2010. I have the top plates for camber adjustment as well but will use them to fine tune my settings. I installed the top plates for maximum negative camber and now wish I had them the other orientation but they will be fine this way for now. I could not use them to reduce front camber settings anyway as the tires would have rubbed on the fender lips and I do not want to try to roll my front fenders. I did that on my 2010 and it did not work out satisfactorily. I was able to adjust my front camber from around -3* to -1*55' . I think this setting will work well on the street and help a little with tire wear. I have not run them on the street yet so I cannot give you any impressions at this point. They did however work very well on my 2010 but set at around -3* camber.
If you are going to try to use the top plates to lower your front camber make sure you install them in the correct orientation for that purpose, you have to swap them from one side to the other. There may be a small adjustment you can make to the top plate as well by grinding some material off. It was in another thread or send Kevin an email and he will be able to help with that and how to ensure you get them installed on the correct side of the car for your purposes. I found the picture he sent in the instructions a little hard to decipher, as to the orientation of the top plates for maximum positive or negative adjustment purposes. Not really sure how much adjustment you will be able to achieve, in reducing the front camber settings, using the top plates alone.
I am not sure how you will stop the rubbing in the right rear. If you do end up grinding the rear lips (for a very little gain) and the fender liner starts to droop you can drill a hole through it into the inner fender (be careful not to go through the quarter panel in the process) and use body fasteners to hold the liner up in place. I have a few in my BS liners, in my HMS flares, holding it out of harms way. They are black plastic fasteners with thin flat tops about 3/4" in diameter and fuzzy stems to hold them in place. Any good body shop should be able to help with this if no one else is brash enough to do it. Make sure the guys check the metal brace at the bumper/quarter panel joint as I think it is a common place for tires to rub on dips. Maybe as a last resort mill a few mm off the hub on your wheels if there is enough meat on them. I am sure you know more the risks vs rewards of doing this than me but I have seen it mentioned several times. Keep safe.
Sorry for writing a book but I hope it helps out.










