Yeah, that shouldn't be a problem SHO SPD...
SHO91MTX
[QB]people! your alignment shops are FOS when the say it's a PITA to do the alignment. shoot I can do a full 4 wheel alignment on the sho in about a half hour, including getting rid of the spot welds and adjusting camber and caster. Don't drill the welds out yourself, because if you don't have the correct tool, you will be weaking the strut towers. Tell the alignment tech to take a 13mm semishallow socket and loosen all 3 nuts. then take an air chisel and the flat bit, and buzz between the strut tower and the plate. Voila, the welds will "pop" and you can go about your alignment.QB]
Yeah, I could align a SHO in a half and hour too?

My average time is about 45 mins on any vehicle... some take up to 2 hours (replacement parts,rusted strut bolts/tie rods)... and some take 20 minutes... and most of that is setup/teardown time (depending on the machine you have).
Yeah, I can take shortcuts, too. but when you use an air chisel, you run the risk of damaging the strut bolts, it (usually) warps the adjustment plate all to ****, and the spot welds, 90% of the time, don't break off evenly... so you're left with weld pieces sticking up. And when you drill them, you don't drill all the way through?!? You see... this is not a PITA.
What's a PITA is when you don't have enough adjustment in the factory camber/caster adjustment slots. Then you have to remove the plate, lower the strut, and die-grind the slots for more adjustment, tighten it back up, lower the front end again and hope it's in spec. Otherwise, you have to keep on grinding away... And when I do it, I always clean the area around the ground slots/spotwelds with a grinder, and lay in a coat of rust-inhibiting paint. (I'm also a body man... rust is my #1 enemy... especially in the upper midwest) wink
Yeah, I know the short-cuts... but when I feel like doing "quality" work, I do it this way. And sometimes doing it the "right" way... just takes longer. That's all I'm trying to say...