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My 99 Civic has been showing it's age recently. For the past 9 months
it has slowly developed a high speed shimmy (60-75mph) that miraculously disappears occasionally. I first started noticing it last October, when I changed my summer wheelset over to my studded winterset. Being a beater winter tireset, I thought they probably just needed to be balanced. I balanced them and it seemed to lessen the shudder, but not eliminate it. Next, I'd never had the car aligned, so I did last November. The mechanic said that he made some minor adjustments but the car would still feel the vibrations until the tire tread wore back into it's normal pattern. Well, they were'nt on long enough for that to happen...so... I put my summer wheelset back on in the spring and it still rattled like hell. I checked out my tie-rods, cv-joints, wheel bearings, did the old strut test (bouncing on corners and visually inspect for signs of leakage) and couldn't find anything wrong. Everything seemed pretty tight. So, I balanced my summer wheelset. No fix. I recently started noticing my left rear tire cupping in the inside. The right rear was starting to cup also, just not as severe. The insides of my fronts were also wearing more than the outsides, just not cupping. I brought the care to the mechanic and he said that they couldn't really do anything (alignment or balancing) without new tires because of the severity of the rear cupping. I didn't want to throw new tires on, get it aligned, then find out it was something else after my new set of tires started cupping again; so I found this group, searched your archives and here I am. I investigated further. I measured ride height in several places. My left rear was the lowest by 1/2" to 1". All others were fairly even. I took a closer look at the shock and strut. They look fine although worn strut would lower this side as well as cup my tire. It would make sense. I also, from time to time, throw a lot of weight in the trunk which doesn't help. I don't have a lot of cash to throw out and want to get this right, the first time. Do you all think it's the strut even though it acts allright (other than height)? Would you recommend an alternative strut manufacturer as opposed to OEM? Could worn rear struts make my steering wheel shimmy? Could they make the front's wear uneven, or is this a seperate problem? Course of action you would take? Whaddya think? |
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my 98 civic has an intermittent shimmy at 120KPH, tire guy said one of my
wheels (aftermarket) was out of round. Also, one of my ball joints is ready to be replaced. t johnmcmurry@gmail.com wrote: >My 99 Civic has been showing it's age recently. For the past 9 months >it has slowly developed a high speed shimmy (60-75mph) that >miraculously disappears occasionally. > >I first started noticing it last October, when I changed my summer >wheelset over to my studded winterset. Being a beater winter tireset, >I thought they probably just needed to be balanced. I balanced them >and it seemed to lessen the shudder, but not eliminate it. > >Next, I'd never had the car aligned, so I did last November. The >mechanic said that he made some minor adjustments but the car would >still feel the vibrations until the tire tread wore back into it's >normal pattern. Well, they were'nt on long enough for that to >happen...so... > >I put my summer wheelset back on in the spring and it still rattled >like hell. I checked out my tie-rods, cv-joints, wheel bearings, did >the old strut test (bouncing on corners and visually inspect for signs >of leakage) and couldn't find anything wrong. Everything seemed pretty >tight. So, I balanced my summer wheelset. No fix. > >I recently started noticing my left rear tire cupping in the inside. >The right rear was starting to cup also, just not as severe. The >insides of my fronts were also wearing more than the outsides, just not >cupping. I brought the care to the mechanic and he said that they >couldn't really do anything (alignment or balancing) without new tires >because of the severity of the rear cupping. > >I didn't want to throw new tires on, get it aligned, then find out it >was something else after my new set of tires started cupping again; so >I found this group, searched your archives and here I am. > >I investigated further. I measured ride height in several places. My >left rear was the lowest by 1/2" to 1". All others were fairly even. >I took a closer look at the shock and strut. They look fine although >worn strut would lower this side as well as cup my tire. It would make >sense. I also, from time to time, throw a lot of weight in the trunk >which doesn't help. > >I don't have a lot of cash to throw out and want to get this right, the >first time. > >Do you all think it's the strut even though it acts allright (other >than height)? > >Would you recommend an alternative strut manufacturer as opposed to >OEM? > >Could worn rear struts make my steering wheel shimmy? > >Could they make the front's wear uneven, or is this a seperate problem? > >Course of action you would take? > >Whaddya think? -- Message posted via CarKB.com http://www.carkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...-cars/200607/1 |
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johnmcmurry@gmail.com wrote:
<snip> > > I recently started noticing my left rear tire cupping in the inside. > The right rear was starting to cup also, just not as severe. ok > The > insides of my fronts were also wearing more than the outsides, just not > cupping. excess toe. > I brought the care to the mechanic and he said that they > couldn't really do anything (alignment or balancing) without new tires > because of the severity of the rear cupping. true. > <snip> > I investigated further. I measured ride height in several places. My > left rear was the lowest by 1/2" to 1". All others were fairly even. <snip> ok, on this generation civic, unlike its predecessors, the lower control arm can be put in upside down leading to lop-sided rear ride height. look under the car from the rear. both lower control arms should have the same "slope" to them, with the bushing for the shock being lowest of the three each side. if it's not that, check for a broken spring, but usually, that's accompanied by squeaking/groaning noises. > > Do you all think it's the strut even though it acts allright (other > than height)? the strut [technically, it's a shock not a strut - it's non-structural] doesn't affect ride height. it can affect cupping if it's shot, but on hondas that's not so common. > > Would you recommend an alternative strut manufacturer as opposed to > OEM? kyb are cheaper than oem and imo, just as good. > > Could worn rear struts make my steering wheel shimmy? much more likely it's worn bushings and/or top front wishbone ball joints. check the tie rods too. > > Could they make the front's wear uneven, or is this a seperate problem? separate problem. > Course of action you would take? check the rear suspension as described, sort out the worn stuff, replace the tires, then see where you go from there. cheap tires can cup regardless of any suspension issue. if you're going to do the work yourself, buy the helm manual. it's by far the best tool investment you'll ever make for this vehicle. |
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Thanks Jim,
I checked out the rear suspension as you said and the lower control arm seems to be installed correctly. I inspected the spring fairly close and saw some rusting near top and bottom of coil yet hadn't noticed any failures. Then, today, when leaving my dipped driveway I heard a "doinngg" sound from the affected area (Left Rear). It sounded just like a spring slipping out of place a bit. Now I'm assuming it's a broken spring causing that rear cupping. Right? |
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I've had that boing noise from the factory. Dealership never really
satisfied me on that one, but I am at 260000kms, and the car is still driving, and I don't get cupped tires. Not to say that in your case its not a problem, but in my case it never has been. t johnmcmurry@gmail.com wrote: >Thanks Jim, > >I checked out the rear suspension as you said and the lower control arm >seems to be installed correctly. > >I inspected the spring fairly close and saw some rusting near top and >bottom of coil yet hadn't noticed any failures. > >Then, today, when leaving my dipped driveway I heard a "doinngg" sound >from the affected area (Left Rear). It sounded just like a spring >slipping out of place a bit. > >Now I'm assuming it's a broken spring causing that rear cupping. >Right? -- Message posted via CarKB.com http://www.carkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...-cars/200607/1 |
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johnmcmurry@gmail.com wrote:
> Thanks Jim, > > I checked out the rear suspension as you said and the lower control arm > seems to be installed correctly. > > I inspected the spring fairly close and saw some rusting near top and > bottom of coil yet hadn't noticed any failures. > > Then, today, when leaving my dipped driveway I heard a "doinngg" sound > from the affected area (Left Rear). It sounded just like a spring > slipping out of place a bit. > > Now I'm assuming it's a broken spring causing that rear cupping. > Right? > if it is a broken spring, yes. you'll have to inspect again with a view to replacement. oem springs are cheap. they're cheaper still from a junk yard. check all the bushings while you're under there. the main trailing arm bushing on that model doesn't last too well. google this group for replacement part #'s [honda only list the full trailing arm on parts diagrams] and a recent post by elle on a tool that allows the bushing to be replaced without dropping the whole suspension. from this point on, if the spring is ok and the rest of the suspension is ok [both the rear shocks the same - in case someone fitted the wrong one at some point], you're going to have to look for body alignment issues. cupping alone can be a defective tire. i know that doesn't answer your question about ride height, but tire quality can be an issue. what brand is it? |
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> >
> if it is a broken spring, yes. you'll have to inspect again with a view > to replacement. oem springs are cheap. they're cheaper still from a > junk yard. What do you mean "with a view to replacement"? I took the wheel off, shined a flashlight on the spring and poked around the cracking plastic coating on both ends with an awl. The coating seemed to be peeling (again, only on the ends) because of rust underneath. I couldn't find any cracks and definately didn't see a dropped coil. I guess if these aren't what to look for, then I don't know how else to inspect springs. Do I have to take the spring out to inspect? If so, I might as well replace it. (Side question...I should probably replace the springs in pairs, right?) > check all the bushings while you're under there. the main > trailing arm bushing on that model doesn't last too well. google this > group for replacement part #'s [honda only list the full trailing arm on > parts diagrams] and a recent post by elle on a tool that allows the > bushing to be replaced without dropping the whole suspension. Thanks. I'll check these out again. I initially gave these a quick inspection and didn't see anything of concern. The rubber all seems OK and there isn't any play when josseled. Any other method of inspection I should be using? > from this point on, if the spring is ok and the rest of the suspension > is ok [both the rear shocks the same - in case someone fitted the wrong > one at some point], you're going to have to look for body alignment issues. > > cupping alone can be a defective tire. i know that doesn't answer your > question about ride height, but tire quality can be an issue. what > brand is it? The tires were inexpensive. Ventus HRII 17". Thing is, after inspecting my winter tire set (nokian hakkapellittas) these were very slightly unevenly worn. I might, very slightly, be able to detect a bit of cupping on these also. Man. I really hope it's not a body alignment issue. |
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OK It's most likely not a broken spring. I measured the distance from
both spring seats and compared. The distance is almost exact (within 1mm). The summer tires have approximately 33K miles on them. They are inexpensive tires and I hope that they are to blame for all of this. My winter tires have about 35K miles on them. Now that I'm seeing the cupping on the summer tires, I inspected the winter tires more thorough and think I see very slight cupping. It might just be the power of suggestion though. They are loud regardless because they are large-lugged and studded. Maybe I'll take some pictures and provide a link so you can all see what I'm talking about. |
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OK, newest update:
I recently noticed a pretty serious negative camber on my rear wheels. The most affected tire has the most negative camber. I took a 2ft level out for some quick and dirty estimates and used it to determine the severity of the camber. I inspected, once again, the bushings, bearings, ball joints, tie rods, steering, etc. and all I can find is some minor dry cracking in the lower trailing arm bushing. The rear wheels on this Civic don't have any camber adjustments? Right? Nothing seems bent. I just don't know. All I can imagine, and other have said it isn't possible, is that the 17" aluminum wheels, with lo-profile tires are to blame. They seem the same overall height... Anybody else have this issue without having lowered the car? |
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John wrote:
> OK, newest update: > > I recently noticed a pretty serious negative camber on my rear wheels. > The most affected tire has the most negative camber. I took a 2ft > level out for some quick and dirty estimates and used it to determine > the severity of the camber. > > I inspected, once again, the bushings, bearings, ball joints, tie rods, > steering, etc. and all I can find is some minor dry cracking in the > lower trailing arm bushing. > > The rear wheels on this Civic don't have any camber adjustments? > Right? Nothing seems bent. I just don't know. no, no adjustments. if it's out of camber, either something's bent, a bushing has gone, or as you've said before, the ride height is somehow defective so the wheel is seated too high up in the wheel well. that's your #1 priority. > > All I can imagine, and other have said it isn't possible, is that the > 17" aluminum wheels, with lo-profile tires are to blame. They seem the > same overall height... if the wheels are all the same size... > > Anybody else have this issue without having lowered the car? > yes, but only when a rear control arm was in upside down. all other instances i've seen were crash damage or failed springs. before, you mentioned posting some pics - at this stage, that would be really helpful. |
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