jaynine89
Active Member
I have a question for the mechanically-inclined out there. I'm posting it in the Urgent Help section because I plan on driving from Madison to the Twin Cities in Minnesota next week and would like to get it resolved asap. If there is a more appropriate area for me to post, let me know.
For about the last two weeks, my truck has been shaking and vibrating at highway speeds. I've really nailed it down to speeds above 63 mph that it starts to happen and only gets worse with more speed.
At first I thought there may be something vibrating from the engine that was then rattling the entire vehicle, perhaps due to filling up with lower quality gas at a station I don't usually go to. However, when I filled up two more times and still had the issue, I ruled that out.
The problem starts as sort of a low hum, which then builds up into a relatively violent vibration. Not really any shaking, but there is enough vibration permeating into the cab that the cowl and dashboard buzz and vibrate.
A coworker who has always done his own maintenance has been trying to help me trouble-shoot the problem, and so far we've done a differential fluid change (the truck has 75,000 miles on it, likely its first change in its life) and realized that the rear wheels have a little play in them. What I mean by that is that when the rear-end is in the air, and both tires are off the ground, you can shimmy each of the rear wheels toward the differential and then back away. It isn't by much, but it didn't seem right to either of us. We measured the play when we did the differential fluid change, but for some reason I seem to have misplaced our measurements. Could this be related?
His next theory is that the tires need to be rebalanced or changed. With Wisconsin winter around the corner, I will need new tires. My only hesitation comes because of the relative newness of this problem; it's only been happening for a few weeks, and seemed to happen suddenly. If the tires were out of balance or wearing improperly, shouldn't I have noticed something sooner?
My final theory is the rear wheel bearings. I'm fairly convinced this problem is stemming from the rear-end; nothing up front seems out of place.
In addition to the shaking and vibrating, the rear-end squeaks as I move away from a stop. I'm not sure if this might be related as well.
Hopefully I didn't write too much of a novel and I can get a few responses. Please let me know if you guys have any theories and fixes I can try to make this vibration go away. I'd rather not drive to St. Paul and be confined to less than 65 mph because the truck vibrates so much. That will make for a very long ride...
Thanks.
Jayson
For about the last two weeks, my truck has been shaking and vibrating at highway speeds. I've really nailed it down to speeds above 63 mph that it starts to happen and only gets worse with more speed.
At first I thought there may be something vibrating from the engine that was then rattling the entire vehicle, perhaps due to filling up with lower quality gas at a station I don't usually go to. However, when I filled up two more times and still had the issue, I ruled that out.
The problem starts as sort of a low hum, which then builds up into a relatively violent vibration. Not really any shaking, but there is enough vibration permeating into the cab that the cowl and dashboard buzz and vibrate.
A coworker who has always done his own maintenance has been trying to help me trouble-shoot the problem, and so far we've done a differential fluid change (the truck has 75,000 miles on it, likely its first change in its life) and realized that the rear wheels have a little play in them. What I mean by that is that when the rear-end is in the air, and both tires are off the ground, you can shimmy each of the rear wheels toward the differential and then back away. It isn't by much, but it didn't seem right to either of us. We measured the play when we did the differential fluid change, but for some reason I seem to have misplaced our measurements. Could this be related?
His next theory is that the tires need to be rebalanced or changed. With Wisconsin winter around the corner, I will need new tires. My only hesitation comes because of the relative newness of this problem; it's only been happening for a few weeks, and seemed to happen suddenly. If the tires were out of balance or wearing improperly, shouldn't I have noticed something sooner?
My final theory is the rear wheel bearings. I'm fairly convinced this problem is stemming from the rear-end; nothing up front seems out of place.
In addition to the shaking and vibrating, the rear-end squeaks as I move away from a stop. I'm not sure if this might be related as well.
Hopefully I didn't write too much of a novel and I can get a few responses. Please let me know if you guys have any theories and fixes I can try to make this vibration go away. I'd rather not drive to St. Paul and be confined to less than 65 mph because the truck vibrates so much. That will make for a very long ride...
Thanks.
Jayson