![]() Sometimes your dampers will wear out in a certain velocity range as well, and new tires can shift frequencies that would normally be damped out into ranges your dampers cannot remove anymore. ![]() This can be perceived by the driver because there is more (or less) transmission of wheel disturbances. Switching from an old tire that is low on pressure to a new tire (or a different brand that is stiffer vertically) at a higher pressure will change the way your vehicle takes bumps. Different pressure can effect the handling as well. Basically this changes the way your vehicle handles. The vertical spring rate of the tire is a very important handling and NVH parameter. Any advice on what I should do?ĭid you get the same tires? I am a tire engineer and a lot of people think that as long as they are rubber and hold air they will do. I'm wondering if this guy said he did an alignment and then lied about it. Is this true, or is this guy feeding me some BS? I feel like since I paid the extra money for the alignment, there should be less wobbles instead of more. He said since I had new tires, the tires gripped the road more, and that I could feel more what was going on with the car, in terms of its lacking suspension and what not. Then he went on a ride with me, so I could drive the car and he could feel what it was doing. He felt the tires to make sure the lugnuts were tight, which they were. So, I took the car back and explained this to the mechanic who was in charge of fixing my car. Yet now, after getting these new tires, it is much more wobbly, especially if I'm going on a bumpy road, or over a curve, or a twisty turny road. The thing is, before I took my car in, it didn't wobble or shake that much. I just got four new tires for the car and got alignments done for each tire. I have a 2002 Hyundai Accent that has about 95,000 miles on it. Will my husband divorce me if I dehydrate tomatoes in his F-150 truck?ĭennis Collins, a Highway Accident Investigator at the National Transportation Safety Board The wonderful and epic tale of Yoshi the Yarisįorget the trunk monkey, check out trash pandas. Tire reviews? Tires questions? Post them here.Ĭar trouble? Your title must include year/make/model and a short description of the problem.įor information on content removal, user warnings, and bans, please see the Chain of Action page. Tint questions and advice? Post them here Trying to identify a car? Try /r/whatisthiscar, /r/namethatcar, or /r/rbi. Troubleshooting or AV? Please use the appropriate sub (see the Rules section).ġ4: Guidelines for sharing craigslist/online listings.ġ5: Moderators must follow the Moderator Code of Conduct. Link posts only.ġ1: No polls, surveys, petitions, or requests for money.ġ2: Please read the wiki. Troubleshooting questions belong elsewhere.ĩ: No questions about insurance, laws, or DMV procedures.ġ0.5: Rules regarding major breaking news may be temporarily suspended for 24 hours. No direct image links.Ħ: Car-buying, selling, choosing, or rental posts are not allowed.ħ: Basic questions, troubleshooting, and car mods: Please read the wiki first. Additionally, direct image links are not allowed.ģ: No memes, trolling, copypasta, or low-quality joke posts or comments.ĥ: No clickbait, cryptic, or context-less posts. ![]() -Basics of swapping engines/layouts/transmissions/bodiesĢ: No "spotted" posts.Show Video Threads? - Autos Network Subreddit List Follow us > /r/Cars Wiki We are not a concierge or estimating service, a promotional platform, Consumer Reports, or a replacement for a phone call or Google search. We try to be a helpful discussion-driven community while maintaining high-quality discourse and topical content. We're Reddit's central hub for vehicle-related discussion, industry news, reviews, projects, videos, DIY guides, advice, stories, and more. ![]() r/Cars is the largest automotive enthusiast community on the Internet. ![]()
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