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Wierd banging, clank, rear end.... on the 81 300D
Got this odd issue that comes and goes.. Sometimes the car is fine, drives fine etc, other times you get this loud banging clunking, like a chunk chunk chuck from the rear end. I thought it was due to bad brakes, but I had them all replaced yesterday and it started up again today... I don't SEE anything but it's defiantly coming from the rear wheels someplace. Sometimes it's loud, sounds like someones banging the back end with a hammer, and you can feel it in the car... other times it's soft... or gone...
Coming home just now from another test drive it was fine, then I make a sharp left turn and bang bang bang... Driving me nuts. |
LOL,
try backing up when that happens... not far.. 20 feet would cure it for hundreds of miles in my wagon.. it is 98 percent the half shafts.... |
Adding a little heavy oil to the cv joints if the boots look good may fix you up. Depends if they are partially dry now and the amount of wear present if much.
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If you have a bad axle, one of the mods actually rebuilds them.
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Going to run it into the shop this morning and have the rear wheels pulled back off and take a good look, see what the issue is and order the parts.
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heh, I don't rebuild bad ones, I only Reboot Good ones that have cracking but not broken boots.
it could also be the rear swaybar links. they get REALLY noisy on occasion when turning or backing up... |
x1 on sway bar links....easy to check and easier to replace.
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I would not let that garage put in a chinese replacement axle if they want to. They are cheap but there are potential problems. Good used axle is superior usually in my opinion.
Unless the garage has a lot of experience with this brand they will not Know that adding a little heavy oil to the cv joint can be helpfull. Unless you have an exceptional example running for paid service is going to require deep pockets. The beauty of these cars is you can maintain them yourself unlike many modern cars. If a person cannot or is unwilling to tackle most things they may not be the car to own. I know I would not recommend one to a friend if either he did not mind throwing a lot of money at it or was prepared to deal with any faults himself. These are older cars with lots of miles on them usually and have not been well kept up by previous owners. There are exceptions of course but they are not the general run of used cars of this type available. Then again as suggested it may only be the sway bar links as some have mentioned. From your description I would not count on it. |
It's the axel. I took it over to the shop I use this morning and we put it back up on the lift and gave it a good looking at. The axels banging right where it meets the pumpkin. there was a dime size hole in the boot protecting it.
We took a grease gun and filled it up with grease. Cost... free. Drove it about 100 miles today with no further problems. Plan on getting a new axel for it in a week or so. |
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You will have to eventually replace the entire axle. It isn't hard, just time consuming if it is your first DIY. The show can do it easily as well. CVJ axle's mailed me rebuilt axles that I have on right now. They're doing very well. The oil however will spill out quickly, wrap the entire joint in duct tape and you can drive for a few thousand miles before replacing them :cool: |
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I love it when everyone else lines up on the other side of my advice... ( Sway bar Links --HA !!! ) LOL However, you likely have not fixed your problem... First , as I mentioned.. mine would quit the noise for hundreds of miles at a time for little or no reason.. but almost always if I stopped and backup up... Second, The Factory Installs Heavy OIL... not grease... as you can imagine if you think of the physics.. as soon as you get that thing turning fast centrifugal force will throw that grease to the boots...and since it is grease INSTEAD of OIL.. it will stay there... so , you need to fix your boots so you can install OIL.. which will be able to splash on the parts needing lubrication. |
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