Choose OEM Alignment Bolt, you're making the optimal decision for superior quality and perfect performance. You can feel confident because each component goes through stringent quality checks. Every part is carefully built to comply with Oldsmobile's factory specifications. You'll enjoy a smooth, worry-free installation that fits just right. At ChevyPartsDeal.com, you'll find it easy to get top-quality OEM Oldsmobile Alignment Bolt. You can shop at highly competitive prices and protect your budget. All our genuine Oldsmobile parts include a dependable manufacturer's warranty. You'll also appreciate our straightforward return policy and swift delivery services for extra convenience.
The Oldsmobile Alignment Bolt allows motorists to adjust camber or caster in order to get their vintage automobiles to travel straight and preserve tires, combining easy-to-use and hard-to-break steel. Oldsmobile started to production of affordable cars in 1897, the company introduced the moving assembly line that quickened the production and the Curved Dash that got America on wheels. This company was later acquired by General Motors and has continued to push technology and has introduced the Hydra-Matic automatic transmission in 1940 that enabled smooth shifts in gears without a clutch. Throughout the decades, Oldsmobile had gained a reputation of being reliable, silent cabins, and hot engines that enabled the family to travel long distances without fear. Its gradual progress in comfort and safety made any Oldsmobile modern in its time. The Alignment Bolt is an eccentric cam head which fits the mount of the strut or control arm, its shape changes the quick twist to accurate correction of wheel angle. Installation, level parking, chocking tires, loosening lug nuts, jacking up the car, and removing the wheel. Put the chalk on the original bolt position and then remove the factory fastener and pass in the new Alignment Bolt in the direction that will either add or take away camber. Install the nut, get the suspension to the normal ride height, adjust the Alignment Bolt until the angle indicated on a simple camber gauge, then tighten it, re-fit the wheel and complete the process with a thorough road test, which ensures the steering is straight.