Thank you for your input, it was very helpful for me communicating proper with the mechanic, who turned out to be a experienced man. He asked me if I wanted too much negative camber (/---\) to look cool, so I said no of course, he liked the camber plates and he also tried to put the steeringwheel straight, which not really worked out perfectly but he said when you get the new tyres, I'll fix that.
He also asked me a lot and told me a lot, (I was doing my best to not ask too much questions, all in all it took 90 minutes) also about other cars and I'm sure he got the message and probably was looking for answers from me he had to pull out of me, at a few things I told him, I really don't follow anymore what you are saying.
He also asked what the heck happened with the car, so I told him somebody crashed in to the front wheel and that it was visible in the whole chassis. I noticed he didn't touch the camberplate on that side, telling me it was good already and sometimes you are lucky with that.
I am sure I won't get clearance problems so easily on the rear anymore, he said clearance wasn't too great and might become a problem, so I felt between the rim and spring and said that I expect that won't become a problem, but I didn't feel like crashing the car over a bad road to be sure
However, the clearance on the front wheel that took the beating is too small, other wheel I can tell it's too small too but didn't hear it, so maybe I'm better off to stop using the spacers, of course I know I need a ''stretchbench'' for the car and there is also some room for hammering. What I'm gonna do is let it hit the tyre a few more times and start looking for where it hit. Maximum steering and going through a hole in the road is definately a no-no, so actually I lowered it too much or need to stiffen it more.
But for looks I'm willing to do my best.
Here are the pictures, as you can see the first camberplate is default, the other side was adjusted, so that should say something about what the chassis took at that accident.
I've tried to translate the printout, maybe not everything was translated properly.
![](http://parkeerdoos.netau.net/alignment-print-small.jpg)
For the readable version:
http://parkeerdoos.netau.net/alignment-print.gif
He also told me he adjusted the car for driver weight a tenth.
I noticed the appearing more stifness of the passengerside didn't go away after aligning, I'm not sure how that is possible. (This was already there before I started hard cornering to the right, which I seem to do more often atm, on summerdays and a lot of roundabouts I usually loose the passengerside shockie rear the first :rofl
![:)](images/emoji/happy/smile.gif)
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