I have fought this same battle for 2 years.
I upgrade my gen 1 to gen 2 front arms.
double yoke shims are mandatory, washers a pain and the thickness is never right. if I remember , they don't fit around the bolt without making a flat spot for them
mind is still not right. any really good alignment shop will send u away. they cannot stand the idea of their hard work and liability on some bodies cobbled together mess.
there are any number of reasons things do not line up close enough for a good shop to dial.
this fall I am, I promise, finally going to address my suspension again.
my first stop is AZ, for a new lift kit.(one of my excuses for not fixing this earlier).
there are just so many possibilities ....spring sag, release tension and reapply tension, on old rods, nothing will be the same.
it's a mystery.
Shims are no simple task to get right.
measuring for shim is an art, and requires special constructed jigs.
I believe I have found a guy who is really capable to dial, but of course not till after I put the lift in....
my buggy pulls, scuffs tires, rides like a haywagon and groans like a woman in labor.
she is unhappy with her condition, but she is a trooper, sorry she is a montero. bad choice of words there.
I will get this right.I owe it to her.
I hope u do too.
one thing we collectively should work on,and again I'm guilty of sloth, is designing an UCA, that will accept a king shock pass through.
add a LCA stabilizer rod, going back to the anchor for the torsion rod, weld in a hoop, to anchor the king on top...
it's not an impossible idea, in fact it's not even difficult engineering.
the UCA IS THREADED AND adjustable. the parts screw together.
racers do this all of the time why can't we?