Odd noises when steering car and stopping


Recommended Posts

Well, I cant figure out what is up... I even had mechanics look at it and change parts and none of them fixed it yet (different mechanics)

 

I have a 2008 Pontiac Grand Prix. When I come to a stop going down a hill when I get almost completely stopped there is a pop noise and you can feel it, it feels like its coming from the front drivers side wheel. 

 

I took it to different mechanics three times for that issue, each of them said they "fixed" it... well what they did was this

 

* First replaced a control arm linkage, nope still doing it

* Replaced a sawy bar and bushings because it was cracked... figured it had to be that since it cracked... nope still doing it

* Replaced another linkage... still doing it

 

well the popping noise is getting louder, and now with it when I turn to the right, and only to the right I get a whirl whirl whirl noise as the wheel turns... and no it's not the steering pump because that was replaced also and the noise is still there... almost like a light jacket fabric rubbing together type of noise...

 

well ontop of this it's starting to feel like I am having suspension issues also when I go over a bump it feels like something is moving that shouldnt... it might all be tied together (all the issues) i duno

 

I got rear ended over a year ago when I was at a complete stop, they rebuilt my rear suspension completely but didn't do the front because they claimed it wasn't damaged...

 

not sure if something was and it's now just showing or what...

 

Also replaced both front rotors, didn't help..... (was getting very bad vibration when slowing at high speed, rotors were warped)

 

new brake pads... didn't help (old pads wore too much)

 

anyone have any ideas what ot look for? I was thinking either a wheel hub is bad or the struts or strut mount is bad... but of course the mechanics claim it couldn't be that.... (not sure why not, they changed most of the other parts already)

Jack up the car and start looking at different things. 

 

inner + outer tie rod ends

 

ball joint

 

cv joint

I was going to say CV joint. (Constant Velocity) I have changed a few of these in my time and they do "pop" when they start going bad. Look at the cv joint itself and you'll see a protective rubber accordion like boot that keeps the grease inside, once these tear or otherwise fail, it let's dirt,dust,water, etc in and eventually cause failure.

 

mule610_cv_boot_162.jpg

  • Like 1

Jack up the car and start looking at different things.

inner + outer tie rod ends

ball joint

cv joint <-very possible cause of popping sound.

I was just going to mention the possibility of a warn out cv joint also, OP, does it sound similar to this?

http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2c1nxR7aq1o

Jack up the car and start looking at different things. 

 

inner + outer tie rod ends

 

ball joint

 

cv joint

 

This... 

 

If nothing helps, check the motor mount ... make sure nothing is broken...  I had that happen in Taurus I had, years ago...  had the engine banging the hood due the broken mount.

http://www.harborfreight.com/25-ton-aluminum-racing-floor-jack-with-rapidpump-62309.html

http://www.harborfreight.com/3-ton-aluminum-jack-stands-61627.html

 

If not send it back in to get it fixed being that they didn't fix the issue in the first place (request your money back).

http://www.harborfreight.com/25-ton-aluminum-racing-floor-jack-with-rapidpump-62309.html

http://www.harborfreight.com/3-ton-aluminum-jack-stands-61627.html

 

If not send it back in to get it fixed being that they didn't fix the issue in the first place (request your money back).

 

Well the parts that they replaced did need replaced so asking for money back isnt' going to help, they just didn't fix the issue I asked about... the links were cracking and so was the sway bar

 

yeah, I have jacks I just don't have them where I am right now, but thanks for the links

Well the parts that they replaced did need replaced so asking for money back isnt' going to help, they just didn't fix the issue I asked about... the links were cracking and so was the sway bar

 

yeah, I have jacks I just don't have them where I am right now, but thanks for the links

If you brought it in for a noise in the front end and they replace something unrelated to fixing the noise, well they didn't fix it (regardless if it needed to be replaced or not)...you are paying them for their expertise in being able to properly diagnose and repair the issue not their guess work.

  • Like 1

If you brought it in for a noise in the front end and they replace something unrelated to fixing the noise, well they didn't fix it (regardless if it needed to be replaced or not)...you are paying them for their expertise in being able to properly diagnose and repair the issue not their guess work.

 

Well the shops around me are blah at best... guess I'm use to it... when multiple independent shops and one dealer can't figure it out it drives me nuts... you'd think they'd test drive a car after a fix to see if it fixed it... but either they don't or they aren't listening...

Well the shops around me are blah at best... guess I'm use to it... when multiple independent shops and one dealer can't figure it out it drives me nuts... you'd think they'd test drive a car after a fix to see if it fixed it... but either they don't or they aren't listening...

I know the feeling...the dealer we are going to right now simply thinks the light comes on and that the brakes are not an issue..

 

Stupid people...if the brakes or something in the brake system wasn't an issue the stupid light wouldn't come on.  They replaced the abs module, so unless the module is broken again, the issue is still there and it is another sensor that they are over looking.  I swear if it doesn't beep or have a big neon sign pointing to the issue they can't properly diagnose or troubleshoot it.

While I agree with most, it does sound a lot like CV joints, having it seem by multiple machanics already they should have spotted that pretty quickly as they looked at/changed the drop links.

 

It might be more of an issue with the top mounts on the suspension strut bearing. Normally, the suspension takes a lot of the weight of the car as inertia forces down on front wheels. As the suspension takes the weight, they move around a bit with the bearing, the same happens as you move your steering wheel. Typically you can feel the car pop and judder at low speeds turning and sometimes as you stop and pulling off.

 

Unfortunately, there isn't an easy way to do a visual check as they tend to be well up into the wheel arch. However, removal of the strut unit is usually very easy for inspection and you'll almost always be able to see damage to bearing being split open or you may even find the spring has snapped/cracked already as well. Should take only about half hour to remove and inspect and replace back on the car for inspection and can be done at home with basic tools. I wouldn't advise replacing the strut springs or bearing unless you have the correct tools because they hold a lot of energy. Also, sometimes it's cheaper to just replace the strut/spring and bearing in one go from a junk yard. Just keep in mind that it's also recommended that you replace both sides at the same time. Never had an issue doing that myself, just get the tracking done after a week when they've settled down.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I use Gemini in my rotation of AI clients...that work pays for. It is good at most things, better than copilot for imgage searching and making images, worse at writing vs Claude and way worse at hadling technical issues when it comes to Azure stuff. I also use YT premium and maps. Anything else Google is a pass for me. I have now seen multiple people locked out of their Google accounts for reasons that are just very vauge.
    • Microsoft is building an AI datacenter that "uses less water than a fast food restaurant" by Ivan Jenic Image: Microsoft Microsoft has announced plans to build a new datacenter campus in Pecos, Texas, as the company continues to invest billions in AI infrastructure. The new facility, called project Kilby, will reportedly have a capacity of 2 gigawatts and will be one of the largest single capacity additions in the company’s history. To power the campus, Microsoft signed a 20-year deal with Chevron to supply natural gas from the Permian Basin, America's largest oil field. This deal is set to become the largest collaboration to date between a U.S. oil and gas giant and Big Tech. It’s no secret that Big Tech has often been criticized for exploiting natural resources for its AI developments. Microsoft is trying to mitigate some of that negative consensus by promising to build its own power supply for the new datacenter, independent of the public grid. The Pecos datacenter will be powered by a power plant hub, built by Chevron, with up to 2.5 gigawatts of gas-fired capacity, with potential to scale to up to 5 gigawatts. The facility will include at least seven GE Vernova turbines, with first power potentially coming online as early as late 2027 or early 2028. The power plant hub is part of an approximately $7 billion investment by Chevron, making it one of the largest dedicated energy projects tied to a single datacenter campus in the U.S. Microsoft hasn’t publicly disclosed the amount it’s investing in the new datacenter. Microsoft has also committed to implementing a closed-loop cooling system that will only require an initial water charge to operate. The company said that “the total lifecycle water use of this datacenter is only a fraction of that consumed annually by a typical fast-food restaurant.” What the press release doesn’t mention, however, is how much water the natural gas plant itself will consume, or how a 20-year fossil fuel commitment squares with the company's pledge to be carbon negative by 2030. The construction of the new datacenter should provide over 6,000 construction jobs at peak build-out, and create hundreds of operational job roles once the facility is built. Via: Reuters
    • A lot of uncertainty in this story. Might. Could. Maybe. The truth is we don't know what will happen to the universe in the end, or if it will end. Our own Milky Way galaxy will merge with the Andromeda galaxy in about 2.5 billion years, with our solar system as part of a new, larger cluster. I guess we'll have to and see how it goes down.
    • While people can rely on text expansion, it'd be nice to be able to save prompts as aliases. Since AI chatbots need so much provided context to lessen the chance of them going off rails in their response, it'd be nice to be able to start your prompt with a command word that provides all the necessary context that you find yourself often providing. I know there are 'memory' features, including in Gemini, but I still find myself needing to tell it things in each specific conversation for it to give appropriate responses in many contexts. For example, I have it in the memory that I'm running Fedora 44 KDE Plasma 6.7 yet Gemini constantly gives me instructions for older versions. Once I remind it what I'm running, it corrects itself. This isn't something I should need to do every time I prompt it about my setup.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      mnsgroup earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Conversation Starter
      sumytbe earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      B4dM1k3 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      DarkWun earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      523
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      195
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      94
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      82
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!