Steering Pulls Left (Mostly)
Steering Pulls Left (Mostly)
Author
Discussion

WonkyGibbon

Original Poster:

476 posts

274 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
Hi there,

Despite just having the diff fixed - still have a problem with the steering. The mechanic has totally been over it - the tracking is right, there's a bit of wear in the rack but that shouldn't be an issue. Switched the wheels (front to back and vice versa). Just can't work out what it is. Depending on the road camber, she pulls quite strongly to the left. Anyone - any ideas ? Feeling desperate - really trashes the driving experience.

Thanks,

WG

bridgdav

4,805 posts

271 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
Have you got one arm shorter than the other..???

Seriously though, Have you had both the front and rear set up checked?

Podie

46,647 posts

298 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
bridgdav said:
Have you got one arm shorter than the other..???

Seriously though, Have you had both the front and rear set up checked?



Bigger muscles in one arm?!? :fnarr:

Hmm... tracking? Buckled wheel? Alignment? knackered tyre? tyre pressures?

WonkyGibbon

Original Poster:

476 posts

274 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
Podie said:

bridgdav said:
Have you got one arm shorter than the other..???

Seriously though, Have you had both the front and rear set up checked?



Bigger muscles in one arm?!? :fnarr:

Hmm... tracking? Buckled wheel? Alignment? knackered tyre? tyre pressures?


The right arm has a certain toned feel - yes

The setup has been totally checked out. Tyre pressures are correct and the tyres in good condition. Alignment is good. Wheels were swapped around so that the rears were on the front and the fronts on the back - made no difference. Just can't think what else could be causing it ? It's weird - 'cos it's quite a strong pull - you would think the cause would be obvious.

Podie

46,647 posts

298 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
hmm... GreenV8S..? shpub..? any ideas...?

Podie

46,647 posts

298 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
Steering rack? suspension problem?

M@H

11,298 posts

295 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
Have you had a full 4 wheel laser alignment done..camber/caster etc.? ..the front may be correct in correlation to itself, but out of alignment with respect to the rear.

Cheers,
Matt.


>> Edited by M@H on Wednesday 12th November 16:09

GreenV8S

30,999 posts

307 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
Dunno what your mechanic has checked, but some possible causes:

uneven tyre pressure
uneven front camber or castor
uneven corner weights
uneven ride height
worn suspension bushes

Definitely shouldn't do that, anyway.

shpub

8,507 posts

295 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
Binding brakes, knackered suspension bushes particularly on tie rods, bent chassis (don't laugh - has been known for the front steering to be adjusted to compensate which when set to normal causes the bending to suddenly appear! Pretty rare though!).
I would suspect the brakes or a suspension problem.

WonkyGibbon

Original Poster:

476 posts

274 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
M@H said:
Have you had a full 4 wheel laser alignment done..camber/caster etc.? ..the front may be correct in correlation to itself, but out of alignment with respect to the rear.

Cheers,
Matt.


>> Edited by M@H on Wednesday 12th November 16:09


Not the full wheel monty no. There's a place in Feltham that will do this if necessary though.

Podie

46,647 posts

298 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
Austec do it as well BTW...

WonkyGibbon

Original Poster:

476 posts

274 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
shpub said:
Binding brakes, knackered suspension bushes particularly on tie rods, bent chassis (don't laugh - has been known for the front steering to be adjusted to compensate which when set to normal causes the bending to suddenly appear! Pretty rare though!).
I would suspect the brakes or a suspension problem.


I guess a brake could be stuck on. It only started a few weeks ago. About a week after she was serviced ... (never a good sign !) Just started doing it on the A303 - there hadn't been any big bumps or knocks or anything. Very odd.

WonkyGibbon

Original Poster:

476 posts

274 months

Wednesday 12th November 2003
quotequote all
GreenV8S said:
Dunno what your mechanic has checked, but some possible causes:

uneven tyre pressure
uneven front camber or castor
uneven corner weights
uneven ride height
worn suspension bushes

Definitely shouldn't do that, anyway.


Hmmm - I know the bushes and tyre pressures have been checked - but the others all sound like possibilities.

Thanks for all your thoughts guys - some things to work on here.

WG

Rozza!!!

654 posts

299 months

Thursday 13th November 2003
quotequote all
Is there any play in any of the wheel bearings???

Roy.

ASM

53 posts

271 months

Thursday 13th November 2003
quotequote all
I know it's not the same car but just had the same problem on the shopping trolley and had everything including the steering rack checked, reset and adjusted but still pulled to the left.

Turned out to be a binding brake that was only binding intermittently too which confused matters more.

Changed the pads and disk and lubricated everything and problem went away?

WonkyGibbon

Original Poster:

476 posts

274 months

Friday 14th November 2003
quotequote all
Right - put all your thoughts to Mr Mechanic. And we came to the conclusion that it's unlikely to be the brakes - only because you'd expect the pull to get worse under heavy braking. The ride height does look right and the camber castor thing is apparently also right. Also there's no play in the bearings - although some in the stearing rack

Two things I have noticed. First on a dead flat road it's not to bad - but the pull get's worse as the camber of the road gets worse - so it could be tyre related (tho they look fine). Second - before it went in for it's last service - the steering wheel was dead centre when going straight ahead - but either during the service - or shortly after it changed to being slightly offset to the left. The car hasn't hit the kerb or anything like that as far as I know - so I can't see it being the result of something like that.

All very odd - and very annoying !

WG

M@H

11,298 posts

295 months

Friday 14th November 2003
quotequote all
WonkyGibbon said:
Right - put all your thoughts to Mr Mechanic. And we came to the conclusion that it's unlikely to be the brakes - only because you'd expect the pull to get worse under heavy braking.



Bollox!!

Edited to add..

If you have a "sticking" caliper for example, It will apply pressure at exactly the same rate and pressure as the caliper on the other side when under extreme hydraulic load, however will not back off under the pressure relief when releasing the pedal.

My landrover had a sticky fromt caliper for a while.. pulled to the left when rolling along, and braked in a straight line.. ..who's your mechanic !?

Matt.




>> Edited by M@H on Friday 14th November 13:12

Rozza!!!

654 posts

299 months

Friday 14th November 2003
quotequote all
WonkyGibbon said:
Right - put all your thoughts to Mr Mechanic. And we came to the conclusion that it's unlikely to be the brakes - only because you'd expect the pull to get worse under heavy braking.

WG


That might not neccessarily follow. If the pad is loose then even though your brake system will be working perfectly, the pad might be binding slightly under certain conditions. Just a thought.

Roy.

M@H

11,298 posts

295 months

Friday 14th November 2003
quotequote all
WonkyGibbon said:
Second - before it went in for it's last service - the steering wheel was dead centre when going straight ahead - but either during the service - or shortly after it changed to being slightly offset to the left. The car hasn't hit the kerb or anything like that as far as I know - so I can't see it being the result of something like that.

All very odd - and very annoying !

WG



My guess below (as the steering wheel thing doesnt just "happen" )

..At the service someone took it out for a swift spin... whacked a curb/object with it.. quickly re-tracked it (or had a bit of a go) as they knew they'd done something bad to it.. and now you have an alignment problem.

Sorry...

Matt.
Hope I'm wrong for your sake

>> Edited by M@H on Friday 14th November 14:19

WonkyGibbon

Original Poster:

476 posts

274 months

Friday 14th November 2003
quotequote all
M@H said:

WonkyGibbon said:
Right - put all your thoughts to Mr Mechanic. And we came to the conclusion that it's unlikely to be the brakes - only because you'd expect the pull to get worse under heavy braking.




Bollox!!

Edited to add..

If you have a "sticking" caliper for example, It will apply pressure at exactly the same rate and pressure as the caliper on the other side when under extreme hydraulic load, however will not back off under the pressure relief when releasing the pedal.

My landrover had a sticky fromt caliper for a while.. pulled to the left when rolling along, and braked in a straight line.. ..who's your mechanic !?

Matt.

>> Edited by M@H on Friday 14th November 13:12


G&M in Chiswick and he's very competent. With reference to sticking calipers - the last time I had one was in my old Peugeot 405. I was completely unaware of it under normal driving - I only became aware of it one morning on the M40 when I had cause to brake very hard and the car executed a very unexpected lane change that I was lucky not to lose control of. Brown trousers all round - but a classic sticking caliper moment.

WG