I need to discuss and do a deep dive in the design of the upper control arms and how they are put together and how they are supposex to work. I'm hoping to be educated here. Let's li it the discussion to the OEM/Assembly-line control arms. I don't have one in my hand. I'm working from memory and pictures. Thanks in advance for any help.
The shaft ends have very coarse threads, approximately 8 TPI. The big hex-cups are internally threaded with those same threads. If I remember correctly, both cups screw onto the shaft in the "rightie-tightie" clockwise direction. As the car is driven, and the control arm pivots upward and downward about the shaft when the suspension does its job, the entire control arm moves fore/aft along the shaft's axis since one big hex-cap will be screwing ON and its brother on the other end of the shaft will be screwing OFF. Then, on the other side of the car, its control arm is also migrating fore/aft depending on whether that side's suspension is compressing or extending.
You can see that caster on the left side and caster on the right side are being varied in ways that are rarely symmetrical, as the control arms shift for/aft ! The control arm vertical travel is probably only 45 degrees so the fore/aft movement is not a lot, but but caster only has to be off-target a tiny amount to make the car handle poorly.
I'd like to hear everyone's thoughts on this cheesy way of attaching the suspension to the car. The sway-bar tries to prevent the car from leaning but it still does. See the next post I make pertaining to how to install the shaft in the control arm.