Great looking site by the way !!!

Carlos,
Hey how have you been? We have spoken on various boards over the years. In looking at you front end questions I think you may be measuring from the wrong place. You may have the shock towers in the center of the chassis, but many times the shock towers and the spindle area where the hub / bearings actually ride have no coloration with each other. I have seen shock towers being off anywhere from ¼†– ½†from one side to the other, especially on the Mexican / Brazilian reproductions. In my opinion if you want to be sure that car will track straight, I would measure from the center of the chassis to the hub where the wheel will mount, whether it would be a rotor or brake drum, or the most accurate would be to measure to the bead or center of the wheels you will be using.
By checking the shock towers, as you are presently doing, there are too many other variables that when added together could put you tracking way off, such as trailing arms, grub screw indents in your torsion bars, ball joints / king pin assembly’s, spindles etc. I am in the middle of helping a friend build a buggy, and the brackets where you would bolt the front beam to the stock chassis, were off by 3/8†on one side, had to remove and re weld that side in order to line up and this was a new beam.
I have been in the machine shop business for more than 30 years so I may be splitting hairs here and the way you are doing it may work fine and it may check out to be centered. I just thought I would share my thoughts and experience on this with you and advise you of other variables in the mix, I am in no way degrading the way you are doing it presently. There are probably buggy’s running around that are an inch or more off and perform fine, it just looks to me you have the time and want to do it right.

Besides when you are blowing by some rice burner with a coffee can muffler and a carbon fiber hood, he could care less if your front beam is centered or not. Good Luck.
Thanks,
Butch