Damaged Wheel

Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by DSK333, Jul 21, 2018.

  1. buddyd157

    buddyd157 Road Train Member

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    i ain't no betting man...well the mega millions is nearly up to half a billion dollars, so i bought 2 tickets, but i'b be doing what i told you earlier, jack up the entire rear end, and hand spin (maybe with a helper) the wheels and listen for a grinding noise out of the rear banjo's.

    but if you hear "dueling banjo's" you're hearing the wrong ones.....

     
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  3. buddyd157

    buddyd157 Road Train Member

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    you know what..??

    the drive line angle must be off. those u-joints are most likely at an angle not proper to the line. you may have to get the truck to a specialist in drive lines, and have him use an angle gauge to determine the angle.

    you may have to put on the PROPER size tires that the factory had on originally. not anything larger, OR smaller..
     
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  4. DSK333

    DSK333 Road Train Member

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    I'm leaning that way too. When I put the new carrier bearing on I noticed that I had to push it to the right to get the holes to line up on the crossmember. The old one I took off was the same way. It needed maybe 3/8ths of an inch to get the bolts in. Didn't seem like a big deal but maybe because the carrier bearing is ever so slightly pulling the shafts to one side is enough to cause an issue. I just figured the rubber inside the assembly would allow the shafts to return to their natural/preferred position or angle once spinning. Maybe not though. Also, the tire size has always been what Paccar put on it from the factory. 285/75/24.5.
     
  5. buddyd157

    buddyd157 Road Train Member

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    you have to find out why, that center bearing was even installed like that (the old one). is that cross member removable? or riveted in place?

    if removable, i'd wonder if it was replaced backwards
     
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  6. DSK333

    DSK333 Road Train Member

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    I'll have to take a closer look but I'm fairly certain it's not the crossmember. If it were backwards the holes wouldn't even be close. The differential is a used unit that was there when I bought the truck. Maybe that isn't put in right. I don't know if they have to be shimmed or perhaps the yoke is wrong/off.
     
  7. spyder7723

    spyder7723 Road Train Member

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    Have you actually got the ride height spec from the manufacturer? And checked it against your truck with a tape measure? If not why the hell not?
     
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  8. spyder7723

    spyder7723 Road Train Member

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    Tire sizes will not change the angle. Assuming all 10 tires are the same size.
     
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  9. buddyd157

    buddyd157 Road Train Member

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    it doesn't take much to have the (newer) rear axle installed slightly off, where the naked eye does not pick up on the difference. however, you said you had an alignment, the alignment rack depending on if done on a rack or portable pads, should have picked up on a misaligned installed axle.
     
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  10. DSK333

    DSK333 Road Train Member

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    I've tried all the five positions on the rear where the leveling rod attaches to but then it dawned on me that the rod might not be the factory rod so I'm working on getting those numbers now in a different thread.

    Indeed. I've had a three axle alignment done twice by the same shop. I trust their work and they used a rack with pads built into it and an electronic machine attached to all the wheels.
     
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  11. buddyd157

    buddyd157 Road Train Member

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    ok good. back in my mechanic days, we had no "computerized or real alignment racks, we had pads and a magnetic camber/caster gauge you'd stick onto the front hub, and only could do front wheels. and you had to hope, that you found the level spot on the garage floor as well...!!!!!!
     
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