Vetal4
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2022
- Posts
- 67
- Reaction score
- 120
- Location
- New Mexico
- First Name
- Ian
- Truck Year
- 1988
- Truck Model
- V30 Crew Cab
- Engine Size
- 350
I mentioned this in previous post about driving my new-to-me truck back home after purchase (1988 V30 3+3 4x4), but I had what I now know is known as a "death wobble" at one point in town.....it was during braking so I figured must brake related. I inspected everything roadside and could find anything wrong so kept driving....nothing for the rest of the drive. Truck did have a wheel seal leak so I redid the drum on that side (will do other side soon) and fixed a minor pull stopping. But under certain conditions (kind of hard to reproduce) still has the wobble. It seems to only happen when I'm braking from about 35 mph, and only sometimes then. I think it has to do with how aggressive I am on the brakes. I am totally unfamiliar with this situation, never had it happen before.
Truck stops well, doesn't have steering wheel vibrations otherwise and braking is also generally smooth with no steering vibration except in this one instance. It actually drives really nice otherwise. In my attempt to find the root of the problem I looked over tie rod ends. pitman arm, drag link etc. No play that I could tell. Steering box seems like it has the play that it should (or at least that I would expect)...no wallering in pitman arm, rag joint seems okey, etc. Drivers side wheel is rock solid, no play there. On the passenger side I can move the top of the wheel in juuusst a bit if I push HARD, it springs right back. At first I thought maybe the bearings but it doesn't seem like a bearing wobble...the spring back makes it seem like a worn kingpin bushing, am I wrong here?
My question is...would that along be enough to cause this, seems like the wobble is usually initiated when braking into a turn...would this tiny amount of shift be enough to throw the camber off which then springs back and creates a nasty little feed loop? It seems like most of these death wobble cases are an intersection of worn components that I don't really think is at play here. Could a worn kingpin bushing plus poor tire balance cause this? Doesn't really feel like tire are out of balance though...BTW truck is not lifted or anything, all stock.
Interested to know your thoughts......
Truck stops well, doesn't have steering wheel vibrations otherwise and braking is also generally smooth with no steering vibration except in this one instance. It actually drives really nice otherwise. In my attempt to find the root of the problem I looked over tie rod ends. pitman arm, drag link etc. No play that I could tell. Steering box seems like it has the play that it should (or at least that I would expect)...no wallering in pitman arm, rag joint seems okey, etc. Drivers side wheel is rock solid, no play there. On the passenger side I can move the top of the wheel in juuusst a bit if I push HARD, it springs right back. At first I thought maybe the bearings but it doesn't seem like a bearing wobble...the spring back makes it seem like a worn kingpin bushing, am I wrong here?
My question is...would that along be enough to cause this, seems like the wobble is usually initiated when braking into a turn...would this tiny amount of shift be enough to throw the camber off which then springs back and creates a nasty little feed loop? It seems like most of these death wobble cases are an intersection of worn components that I don't really think is at play here. Could a worn kingpin bushing plus poor tire balance cause this? Doesn't really feel like tire are out of balance though...BTW truck is not lifted or anything, all stock.
Interested to know your thoughts......