Blacksheep Josh
Slinky+Escalator=Fun
- Joined
- July 31, 2006
- Messages
- 3,629
- Reaction score
- 18
- City, State
- Statesboro, GA
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- '01 Ford Ranger, RIP 93 X
Okay, I've been dealing with a front end grinding sound for a while now.
I was pretty sure it was a wheel bearing, so I replaced them....
But the sound was still there...
So I took it to a mechanic, who thought it was a wheel bearing as well, so he torqued them down, but the sound was still there.. this was about a year ago or so. Ever since then I've just turned the stereo up louder and delt with it, which leads us up to today.
My brake pads were gone, the rotors were trashed, so I setup to do pads/rotors, and decided to put in new inner/outer bearings on both front wheels, along with fresh grease, seals and all.
The noise is still there.
I know they are properly greased, because I spent 30 minutes on each one using the grease-in-palm method, then literally dunking them in the grease, so I know there is plenty of grease in there.
This is on a 2WD vehicle, so no front hubs/driveshafts or anything, I can't say for sure, but I'm thinking it's something tranny/engine related. Sometime tomorrow, I'm going to jack up each wheel on it's own, spin it as fast as I can with someone sitting inside and see if the noise is indeed wheel related.
I've thought maybe just bad tire noise from cheap tires, but the noise was there with good Dayton Timberline tires as well. Any thoughts guys? This is starting to really annoy me.
I was pretty sure it was a wheel bearing, so I replaced them....
But the sound was still there...
So I took it to a mechanic, who thought it was a wheel bearing as well, so he torqued them down, but the sound was still there.. this was about a year ago or so. Ever since then I've just turned the stereo up louder and delt with it, which leads us up to today.
My brake pads were gone, the rotors were trashed, so I setup to do pads/rotors, and decided to put in new inner/outer bearings on both front wheels, along with fresh grease, seals and all.
The noise is still there.
I know they are properly greased, because I spent 30 minutes on each one using the grease-in-palm method, then literally dunking them in the grease, so I know there is plenty of grease in there.
This is on a 2WD vehicle, so no front hubs/driveshafts or anything, I can't say for sure, but I'm thinking it's something tranny/engine related. Sometime tomorrow, I'm going to jack up each wheel on it's own, spin it as fast as I can with someone sitting inside and see if the noise is indeed wheel related.
I've thought maybe just bad tire noise from cheap tires, but the noise was there with good Dayton Timberline tires as well. Any thoughts guys? This is starting to really annoy me.