|
|
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Hi all:
I hope somebody can offer some helps on this: My seven month old C240 recently exibits a faint high-pitch whistling noise when the car is travelling between 64mph (104km/h) and 69mph (111 km/h). The noise is not there at speed below and beyond this range. The noise appears to be coming from the right rear passenger door. I check the weatherstripping and it appears to be fine. Maybe some treatment to weatherstripping would cure the noise? Thanks, JohF |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
Start checking where the whistle comes from by sitting in the rear while somebody else is driving. I have heard C classes whistle in the upper corner of the little window, but either the window or door rubber can cause it as well...
Start driving around and push/pull the parts of the door to check whether the sound increases or decreases. greetingz,
__________________
1990 300SL-24 1993 C250D with a minor 600+k kilometer www.MBenzNL.com(the Netherlands) |
#3
|
||||
|
||||
I don't know if I could help - but its a try.
A high pitch whistling sound would mean some wind creeping in through the rubber seals that wraps around the door. If you say its the right rear pax door, do check also the right front door for a joint possibility. I assume nothing is protruding on the outside as that would also create a kinda of a wind-whistle effect at high speed. Before we begin this exercise, do another visual inspection of all seals, gaskets, door mountings and frame to ensure that no gaps are present. Most prevailing are gaps within the rubber seals, or sometimes (rarely) gaps at the panels where the clip has fallen off). You might also want to wind down the windows and check the seal-felt that tightens the glass-window edges. Proceeding with the assumption that it could be the rubber seal, close both the right hand doors, front and rear. Use a musking tape to tape all the edges of both doors. Now drive at a stretch to the offending speed and listen. If the wind whistles yet again, it could be a door frame problem itself. If the whistling is absent, then peel of the tape stretch by stretch as you drive. The idea is to eliminate the possibilities of which door seal is letting through the wind. Once you peeled off the offending tape and the whistle comes on again - you will know which spot and then able to concentrate on that area, perhaps a harden rubber seal. Now, if the test was not fruitful, do a final salvage test by taking out a piece of cardboard. Place the piece of cardboard-paper sticking out of the door frame, and shut the door over it. See if you're able to slip out the cardboard with relative ease. If you can, then perhaps your doors have to be tighten inwards. If you can't, then its good. Let us have your response?
__________________
... Kerry 126 tailed by a 203, 129 leading the pack. |
Bookmarks |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Wind Noise Problem Solved | John Plut | Tech Help | 0 | 09-18-2003 11:06 PM |
Wind noise from door seal -- how to fix? | brookspw | Tech Help | 3 | 01-08-2002 12:25 PM |
How can I reduce wind noise in my SL (R129)? | John Carver | Mercedes-Benz SL Discussion Forum | 4 | 12-10-2001 03:18 PM |
Wind noise on W126 cars | BENZ-LGB | Tech Help | 7 | 11-14-2001 03:15 AM |
C240 - Right rear end noise | johf | Tech Help | 1 | 05-19-2001 10:54 PM |