onecrazynavajo Posted September 7, 2005 Posted September 7, 2005 I searched the forum but to no success. My car has had some very faulty suspension/steering/alignment for quite some time. recently i have replaced struts all around, and done four wheel alignment. here's the problem: the steering feels way too inaccurate when the car accelerates from a stop. Then, after shifting through 4, it feels like the steering snaps all of the sudden and the vehicle jerks to the right (the wheel spins about 20-30 degrees). At first i thought it was coinciding with the shift into fourth, but now im not too sure. As you would imagine, the extent of the wander is a lot worse when turning. Also after the "snap" happens, the vehicle handles better, although still not like it should. A little help would very appreciated, i respect your guys' input. Thanks
bartkat Posted September 7, 2005 Posted September 7, 2005 Whatever it is, sounds unsafe. Seems the car ought to be in the shop getting stuff checked out.
camlex Posted September 7, 2005 Posted September 7, 2005 when you replace struts, which one you used.? did you changed mounts.? did you replaced spring(coils)?. Who did the job. looks to me, that struts jod is the problem. Hope this helps
SKperformance Posted September 7, 2005 Posted September 7, 2005 pulling to the right under 4th? diff? fluid level for tc application? damaged cv's engine/transmission mounts? these are just best guesses as we would need the car to get a better idea of the problem.
xxxavier2k Posted September 7, 2005 Posted September 7, 2005 That souds like your steering rack mounting gromets/bushings are worn causing the rack to slide from side to side.
hammer008 Posted September 8, 2005 Posted September 8, 2005 That souds like your steering rack mounting gromets/bushings are worn causing the rack to slide from side to side. ← I concur. Had the exact same problem...just replace the steering rack/pinion assembly.
deskjockey Posted September 12, 2005 Posted September 12, 2005 Sounds like a power steering master cylinder issue from my stance.
onecrazynavajo Posted September 18, 2005 Author Posted September 18, 2005 Just to settle this for anyone searching in the future with similar symptoms. The problem was that the front control arm bushings were way gone. they had a ton of back and forward motion (they should oly be able to rotate). It was easy to diagnose after taking the front wheels of and pulling on the brake assembly. Any slack at these points allows the wheels to shift their toe-in, and that's what jerks the car. As far as when it happens, i think it just has a tendency to do it at certain speeds and amounts of acceleration/decceleration due to weight shifts. I was just noticing mine because it had just had an alignment job after not beeing aligned for a long time. If u ever see that your bushing is shot, take off the control arm, press or cut out the bushing, go buy one for 25 bucks, and get ahold of a bench-press or use a balljoint c-clamp tool to press the new bushing in (the latter can be borrowed from autozone). just make sure it's straight. also, making alignment marks before taking the old one out will save u a big headache.
tech Posted September 23, 2005 Posted September 23, 2005 Just to settle this for anyone searching in the future with similar symptoms. The problem was that the front control arm bushings were way gone. they had a ton of back and forward motion (they should oly be able to rotate). It was easy to diagnose after taking the front wheels of and pulling on the brake assembly. Any slack at these points allows the wheels to shift their toe-in, and that's what jerks the car. As far as when it happens, i think it just has a tendency to do it at certain speeds and amounts of acceleration/decceleration due to weight shifts. I was just noticing mine because it had just had an alignment job after not beeing aligned for a long time. If u ever see that your bushing is shot, take off the control arm, press or cut out the bushing, go buy one for 25 bucks, and get ahold of a bench-press or use a balljoint c-clamp tool to press the new bushing in (the latter can be borrowed from autozone). just make sure it's straight. also, making alignment marks before taking the old one out will save u a big headache. ← I had the exact same problem on my 97 ES300. Very unusual sensation - hard to describe. My dealer made the same diagnosis, and the car is fine now.
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