I would agree that there is no substitute for a full geometry adjustment such as WIM does – there must be a place somewhere near you.
However, as a temporary DIY job, you can get surprisingly close to the correct camber using one of these:
http://www.axminster.co.uk/gemred-digital-bevel-box-prod564900/This measures relative angles to 0.1 degrees and I have found I can use one to get within 0.2 degrees of the correct camber as subsequently measured by WIM.
This is the technique I used:
- Cut a straight piece of wood to the correct length to span the wheel rim to rim without touching the tyre – a little over 17 inches for me.
- Park the car on the flattest place you can find with the steering straight ahead.
- Set the bevel box to zero on the horizontal – on the piece of wood set on the ground between the front wheels.
Place the wood vertically against each front wheel and use the bevel box against the wood to measure the current camber angle.
- Jack the car up, adjust the camber a little in the correct direction (guesswork!) and lower the car again.
- Roll the car back and forth to settle the suspension.
- Re-check the camber and repeat the adjustment as required.
Adjusting the camber is as described in the maintenance guide – jack up and slacken the relevant bolts just enough to allow the top of the wheel to be tapped in or out, then nip them up again while you lower and re-check. Then torque up when you are finished.
WIM seems to use -1°10' +/-0°45' but, particularly with a comfortably bedded in car such as ours, I get the impression they don’t like to go too far into the upper half of the range i.e. not leaning in too far.
Adjusting the camber will throw out your toe-in so that will have to be done afterwards.
As you can see, all this is quite a faff around so I would still recommend finding a place that can do the geometry setup properly. The only reason I bothered was that my tyres were wearing at an alarming rate and I had a lot of miles to do before I could get to WIM.
HTH