michaelb wrote:
Hi Lillee, I dont think a wheel alignment will affect the relationship between the trailing arm and the wheel as the hub is fixed to the end of the trailing arm with no adjustment. The wheel alignment will change the relationship between the trailing arm and the subframe and could slightly change the relationship between the wheel and the body.
As others have stated I would suspect the body may have been repaired

A remote possibility is the wheels are different offset but this sounds unusual.
I think we are all very interested in the final outcome.
The fact that the trailing arms aren't adjustable means nothing. They were bad from the factory to begin with and can be bent with a hard sideways knock against a gutter in a slide in the wet for instance.
I understand what you are saying but I am saying that there could be more to it than that:
- If the tyre is rubbing against the trailing arm, it could mean the trailing arm is bent.
- If the tyre is rubbing against the body and not the trailing arm, then the subframe may be bent where the trailing arm is mounted to it OR the subframe itself is bent relative to the body, either via actual bending of metal in the subframe or the body panels are bent where the subframe is bolted to the car.
- It could be a combination of all of these things, a slightly bent trailing arm, a bent subframe and/or a bent body where the subframe mounts to.
You can align the rear arms all you like to have exactly 1/16 toe in etc but if the subframe or trailing arm mounts are bent then you will have a crabbing car and the tyres do not point straight relative to the actual car. And hence rubbing either on the body or the trailing arm.
This is exactly how Lillee was when I got her, she crabbed to the left noticeably. Although the toe and camber were correct, the left trailing arm was bent relative to the subframe but the subframe was straight relative to the car. So it required realigning the trailing arm back against the subframe which meant also changing the other side so that total toe in was 1/16 relative to the car body.
So what I am suggesting is to figure out WHAT is bent where. Is it the body? Is it the subframe? is the trailing arm? or is it some or all of the above (all possible). Once you've measured it up right (no guess work, get it done professionally down to the mm, up on a hoist) of all of these things, then you can start fixing it back to straight and true.