![]() |
|
|
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Sounds of silence
It was only some miles after I sort out all valve agressive noises, that i realised of some "new" notes coming from front wheels and steering wheel itself. As for the front wheels i only notice some squealing when entering the garage after a ride, never on leaving or while riding. Is that normal?
The other is a rubbing noise coming from s/wheel as if the wheel were too close to the column. My mechanic try to fix it with some glicerine and plastic cutter but the rubbing is still there. I wonder if the wheel can be taken further aback from column? Apart from those, and some wind entering thru the window gap and hard top my 79 280 SL goes like silk! Pagodix Madrid Keep up the good tune! |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
This may help a bit!
As to your first question,
This is a bit of a primer on tires, but here we go! The rubber used in tires varies greatly, The harder the rubber the longer the tire wear in general. That is why the Michelin get a consistent 50,000 plus miles, it has a harder rubber than most tires, A Grade. But they still have a respectable B grade in traction! That said, your traction grade is often reduced with wear improvement. (When you look for new tires you will see that the better the wear life grade, the lower the traction grade. For “great tires” the trick is to find the best in both categories! Don’t be fooled by longer tire life in a MB! Your grandmother is not going to be driving it! ![]() When warm your tires have better grip than when cold! The rubber softens a bit! When you enter the garage on your return the tires are warmer and trying to grip better, thus some squeal if you are asking more than the rubber can give! It is slipping a bit while gripping better. Often more pronounced on concrete than asphalt! ![]() When they are cold on your leaving they are still slipping but with less grip and they don't cry about it as much! In warm weather the grip is also better than in extreme cold weather! Too a point, when really hot, the tire rubber can be too soft for the demand and you loose traction and if in a high speed curve, slide! As for the second question the problem may be in the shaft and not the wheel area, can you clearly identify the origin of the rub? Remove the plastic cowl above the turn signal arms if you can on your vehicle and see if the sound is louder. It may help you find it, if that is possible. Several devices ride on the column shaft, like the turn signal indicator return guide. (This causes the turn signal to pop back!) And your Horn electrical contact transfer. If you have air bags use caution poking around in here! Something there may need some lube! trants4md ![]() ______________ 85 500SEL 80 Leland TR7 Convertible And Some American Stuff 94 Dodge Ram 93 Chev Lumina APV 79-81-83 Forzda |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Hi trants4md,
Thanks for advice, I should look with more detail into the steering wheel rubbing. Regarding front wheeels perhaps I did not explain myself correctly, the noise seems to come from the hub/brakes area rather than the tyre itself. In fact I just returned from a shopping ride and it has not squeal or creek or anything, strange..hmmmm |
![]() |
Bookmarks |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Post any sounds or videos of MB diesels you may have! | 190D22 | Diesel Discussion | 52 | 06-22-2007 12:07 AM |
upgrading sounds on my TD | wagonboy | Diesel Discussion | 23 | 02-22-2007 01:35 PM |
Anything to silence the ticking 420sel | SCOTTFISH | Tech Help | 9 | 05-05-2004 03:22 PM |
It almost sounds like a spark knock! | oilslick | Diesel Discussion | 9 | 01-31-2004 02:37 PM |
strange sounds | jlroe | Tech Help | 2 | 01-20-2000 10:43 PM |