Humming noise from wheel
Author
Discussion

Lozw86

Original Poster:

896 posts

154 months

Saturday 24th March 2018
quotequote all
Hi all,

I had an unfortunate sideways slide and collision with a kerb in the ice at around 15mph. There is a humming type noise coming from one of the wheels on the side that the impact occurred. I have had a full wheel alignment completed and the noise remains. Might the wheel bearing(s) be damaged? Any other likely causes of the noise? It's a 2017 BMW. Worth a trip to the dealer or get an independent to check it out?

Any help or suggestions appreciated

Thanks

Loz

cjs racing.

2,508 posts

151 months

Saturday 24th March 2018
quotequote all
Sounds like a bearing to me.

Get down to and indi, a quick ride along, or shake of the wheel, and the mechanic will know.

Equus

16,980 posts

123 months

Saturday 24th March 2018
quotequote all
Bearing is unlikely, I would have thought.

Might be damage to the tyre carcass. Try changing to the spare tyre, if you have a full-sized spare.

Might also be a bent or buckled wheel, although I've have expected them to pick that up when they were doing the geo (though maybe not, with some of the monkeys they employ these days...), and you'd normally get feedback through the steering. Try spinning the wheel by hand (up on jack, of course) to see if it's visibly out of true.

Lozw86

Original Poster:

896 posts

154 months

Saturday 24th March 2018
quotequote all
Thanks for the replies

The wheel has been replaced for a brand new one ( the original was damaged in the collision ) so I know the wheel is true

Equus

16,980 posts

123 months

Saturday 24th March 2018
quotequote all
That hopefully rules out damage to the tyre carcass, too, then.

It's not just 'feathering' of the new tyre, is it?

Some cars are probe to this, even if the geometry is correct (and possibly yours isn't, if it's just been re-done): I used to have a Skoda Octavia vRS that went through phases of it, depending on the level of tyre wear, and made the most godawful droning noise, just like a worn bearing.

Lozw86

Original Poster:

896 posts

154 months

Saturday 24th March 2018
quotequote all
No the existing tyre was examined (all ok) and fitted to the new wheel

I think it must be bearings or something else

GreenV8S

30,997 posts

306 months

Saturday 24th March 2018
quotequote all
A damaged wheel bearing would fit the symptoms. Assuming you take it to a mechanic to have it repaired, they would probably be able to confirm that diagnosis before you commit to the repair.

Lozw86

Original Poster:

896 posts

154 months

Saturday 24th March 2018
quotequote all
No the existing tyre was examined (all ok) and fitted to the new wheel

I think it must be bearings or something else

HustleRussell

26,028 posts

182 months

Sunday 25th March 2018
quotequote all
It’ll be the bearing.

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

277 months

Tuesday 27th March 2018
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Equus said:
Bearing is unlikely, I would have thought.
Bearing damage is entirely likely from a sideways impact with something solid.