br1anstorm
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- United Kingdom
There is no evidence that a worn, even missing, steering damper will cause, or contribute to death wobble. Many people, including myself, do not have a steering dampener installed; it's really not needed, and if it appears to help, it's merely a "band aid", covering up the real culprit.
Yes, xjbubba, I was very aware that the steering damper was unlikely to be a primary cause of DW, and that replacing it might not help but could disguise the problem. That's why I didn't replace it until after I had already done the shocks, the bushings, the UJs and checked alignment and wheel balance. I now find it interesting that even a brand new steering damper doesn't cover up the DW, which is still as bad as it was!
Not sure how you determined "the ball joints are well within tolerance", but I can tell you worn ball joints can cause, and are a major source of death wobble, as are worn track bar bushings/rod-ends, and worn tie-rod and steering linkage. At 130K miles, any and all of those front axle steering and control arm bushings are probably shot.
We pryed the ball joints with a crowbar while in place - no slack. Then we looked at them on the bench - they were sound. If my rally-car building engineer colleague, whose professional workshop we use, tells me they are good, then they are good.
As for the bushings, I have replaced them all (see earlier posts in this thread) with Daystar polyurethane ones, and also fitted new tie-rod ends. So it's clear that the problem isn't with wear in any of them. In fact there's a theory (see separate discussion with heyhar) that these hard new bushings might be one cause of the trouble!
Neither front or rear drive shafts can cause death wobble. But, to satisfy yourself without spending money (that is if you are doing your own work), just remove the "suspect" shaft and go for a ride.
Thanks for that reassurance. Neither I nor my engineer buddy thought the drive shafts were responsible for DW (though I've seen some DW checklists which include "out of balance driveshafts" as an item to check). But if I get utterly desperate, I will take out both shafts and see what happens!