Totally looks like that tire is out of round.
it most certainly is lol. Have you ever driven a Jeep with a front tire looking like this— could this cause death wobble?Totally looks like that tire is out of round.
Totally looks like that tire is out of round.
it most certainly is lol. Have you ever driven a Jeep with a front tire looking like this— could this cause death wobble?Totally looks like that tire is out of round.
There we go! First response after 20 that answers my question X5 ...thank you!!!!The axle u-joint is not going to cause DW, but those tires will. If it were mine I would replace those front tires and have it checked on a laser alignment rig (most alignment shops). Then we can look at the toe (which they can align for you and take a look at the caster and camber. Ask them for the before and after print out like this one:
View attachment 145284
I think the last “20 replies” that didn’t answer your question....did. Why do you always make it sound like no one on here is helpful? I’m out.
If the tire is any indication of maintenance I would check every front end component along with every nut and bolt on the suspension.Based on the looks of the tire I would check ball joints and tie rod ends
LOL HAHAHAHHAIf the tire is any indication of maintenance I would check every front end component along with every nut and bolt on the suspension.
I couldn’t agree with you more! I’m removing my spare tomorrow and putting it on that bald tire lolA tire that worn will no longer be round and cannot be balanced. Severely out of balanced or out of round tires will cause DW.
Which is the track bar?2 things...absolutely yes on the tire ....but typically tire related death wobble will do it consistently ....start every time at around the same speed, and is not dependent on road conditions .
What your original post described sounded like the bump set it off, which normally indicates a loose component, which is often the track bar as a bump compresses the suspension and the track bar applies counter force to keep the axle centered .
moving the steering wheel from 10-2 and watching each end of the track bar as you change direction usually will reveal excess track bar movement ...anything more than the flex of the bushing can be too much , and bushings get soft and deteriorate as well.
irregardless , that tire is in bad shape , so you are making a good move .
I tried 3 times earlier going up to 70km/h and it happens everytime without hitting bumps in the road — this is the worn tire and it being unbalanced?
Reading this I think you need to get your priorities straight because you cannot have it both ways.....also I forgot to mention ....those front tires haven’t been rotated at all for 3 years lol .... also need to mention as well that before I bought my Jeep 7-8 years ago it was in a front end collision which messed with the front end alignment(something like this). The front “toe” is shifted inwards and Even the guy who does my alignment from the machine can never get it entirely bang on because of this. Ball joints - tie rods etc etc isn’t the cause of the uneven wear I have them changed last summer
