Craniac
New member
I'm cheap and there are no laser alignment shops near me. So...
Pull the bike onto a smooth, level working area. Make certain the wheels are pointed straight ahead.
Get a three to four foot long straight edge. Place the straight edge on the inside of the tire as high as you can, allow the other end to drop to the floor. Mark where the straight edge contacts the ground with a piece of tape. Pic shows a gap. But if you look straight down, the tape is directly below the straight edge. It does not matter which edge you mark as long as you stay consistent. I put the tape on the outside of the straight edge so the tape was in line with the tire. Then the measurement was taken between the pieces of tape.
Do the same thing towards the rear.

Now do the other side. Then measure the distance between tape marks.


Pics came out poor because the camera was not pointing straight down and I got a parallax error but I had about a quarter inch toe in.
This does NOT check for centering on the rear wheel. It is NOT as good as a laser alignment. I am NOT trying to take business away from any of the vendors. But... it is a quick way to check your alignment. If you find something way out of spec, you will know you need an alignment.
Pull the bike onto a smooth, level working area. Make certain the wheels are pointed straight ahead.
Get a three to four foot long straight edge. Place the straight edge on the inside of the tire as high as you can, allow the other end to drop to the floor. Mark where the straight edge contacts the ground with a piece of tape. Pic shows a gap. But if you look straight down, the tape is directly below the straight edge. It does not matter which edge you mark as long as you stay consistent. I put the tape on the outside of the straight edge so the tape was in line with the tire. Then the measurement was taken between the pieces of tape.
Do the same thing towards the rear.

Now do the other side. Then measure the distance between tape marks.


Pics came out poor because the camera was not pointing straight down and I got a parallax error but I had about a quarter inch toe in.
This does NOT check for centering on the rear wheel. It is NOT as good as a laser alignment. I am NOT trying to take business away from any of the vendors. But... it is a quick way to check your alignment. If you find something way out of spec, you will know you need an alignment.