With a differnece of 3/8" camber on one side a misalignment of gears can be a great problem. The gear mesh is not true. There will be gear stress on the front end four wheel drive axle. With the gears binding a mechanical failure will show up at some place. Since the gears in the front end are heavier than the parts in the transmission, The mechanical failure could show up at the transmission. With an elevated loaded bucket the stress (hyperextension) is now increased expotentially. If the mechanical failure shows up at the wheel, the one with greater positive camber than the opposing wheel, a rollover is possible. The AGCO customer service representative, Steve, agreed with me that this situation is a factory defect. The salesman at Boast Enterprises in Bourbon, Mo. told me, in my driveway when he came to pick up the tractor, that the only fix is to replace the entire front end. The mechanic at Boast Enterprises told me he can't fix the situation being in agreement that this is something out of bounds with what he is allowed to do in the shop. The AGCO tech, Paul Erwin, adjusted the toe-in to correct the camber. 101 mechanics: "toe-in and camber are two different disciplines". There is no adjustment for camber. Camber is set mechanically at the factory. (Indonesia) The AGCO tech, to this day, insists that this camber difference is normal and I am the only one complaining. If that is true....then there are a lot of Massey Ferguson 1825e trators that are defective. There are quite a few 1825e with low hours for sale on the internet.