» Site Navigation | | » Recent Threads | | | | | | | 02-06-2009, 04:34 AM | #1 | Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Athens, Ohio Posts: 121 | Steering Wander - Tie Rods? I'm trying to confirm my issue. I think it could be tie rods. Could it also be stabilizer bushings? 1998 318ti; 158k Symptom: Steering wanders here and there. Particularly noticeable on highway, especially slightly uneven surface such as freeway with dip in pavement caused by semi traffic. When I change lanes, it feels like driving a boat cresting a wake. Steering drifts slightly and I have to countersteer to correct. Nothing too crazy, just not as tight as it used to be. Recent work: Control arms and control arm bushings have been replaced. Bent wheels have been straightened and refinished. New tires. This made absolutely no difference. A mechanic said he noticed stabilizer bushings appeared "cut." But isn't that sort of how they come? My reading tells me this is most likely in the tie rod, tie rod end, steering knuckle area. Any thoughts? | | | 02-06-2009, 05:56 AM | #2 | Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Austin Posts: 3,059 | My car is doing the same thing now. Started doing it once I put on the new rims. __________________ Come get a ti-shirt Quote: From the e30 M3, evolved the e36. They were "Keepin it Real" when they introduced the 318ti ClubSport in '95 and the 318ti Sports from '96 to '99. After that... well nothing else really matters. ~Jess | | | | 02-06-2009, 06:17 AM | #3 | Senior Member Join Date: May 2008 Location: Rhode Island Posts: 144 | need an alignment | | | 02-06-2009, 06:26 AM | #4 | Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Annapolis/College Park Posts: 337 | mrnine, my ti is doing exactly the same thing...almost completely lost control this afternoon when I changed lanes and hit a sloping pothole. I was thinking tie-rods too, but like Maverix I noticed exactly how bad it was when I first put some 17x8 wheels on last July. I was also thinking it could be really really bad control arm bushings/ball joints, but apparently you got that fixed and your symptoms continued. Good luck though, we can keep eachother posted on our findings. __________________ She's no longer mine, but I gotta keep the pic Current euro: Black MkIII VW Gti VR6 | | | 02-06-2009, 06:28 AM | #5 | Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Elizabeth City, NC Posts: 3,877 | With wider wheels/tires your car will track differently. There is more rubber to turn so things tend to be more noticeable. I seem to recall a thread talking about subframe bushings being shot and making the car feel like a boat. I'm going to try and find it. Edit - found this thread that talks about subframe bushings and how they make the car feel. Says that it makes the rear feel like it's not following the front. For you guys that is probably not the case. http://www.318ti.org/forum/showthrea...frame+bushings __________________ ~Dave~ 98 328ti Morea Grun slicktop 11 128i space gray slicktop 13 JGC WK2 Deep Cherry Search | RealOEM | | | 02-06-2009, 06:47 AM | #6 | Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Oxford, Ohio Posts: 868 | The sway bar bushings are a split design, so nothing wrong there. I am going to say your problem is in the rear of the car. I had the same problem, then replaced the rear subframe bushings and trailing arm bushings. Now all is well. | | | 02-06-2009, 06:53 AM | #7 | Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Annapolis/College Park Posts: 337 | While I don't doubt you, dave, I just find it really, really hard to believe that me having to wrestle the steering wheel to keep the car going where I want it to go is a result of the rear being out of whack. Wouldn't the subframe being toast result in a feeling of the rear not following the front? Not something directly steering-input related? __________________ She's no longer mine, but I gotta keep the pic Current euro: Black MkIII VW Gti VR6 | | | 02-06-2009, 03:31 PM | #8 | Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Cincinnati Posts: 890 | Doing the tie-rods would complete your front suspension refresh, plus they are cheap if you install them yourself. Looking forward to changing out the rear bushings, but I haven't done it yet. __________________ SOLD!!! 1999 332ti //M Sport Titanium Silver M3 S52 3.2 I-6 Engine, M3 Clutch w/ ti Getrag Trans, Z3 3.15 LSD medium case diff and half shafts, OEM Hatch Spoiler, Eurosport HP Underdrive Pulleys, FDM, 17" DS1 rims, M3 Front Struts & Springs, M3 Instrument Cluster, 3-spoke //M steering wheel with tri-color stitching, SSK, CCFL Angels in Depo projectors with 5k HIDs | | | 02-06-2009, 03:36 PM | #9 | Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Athens, Ohio Posts: 121 | Forgot to mention it but an alignment was done. Matter of fact, it was done twice because I told them I was concerned that they didn't quite get it right after they did control arms and bushings. Also, this isn't a tire change of any sort. They're the same brand/size tires I have always had on it. | | | 02-06-2009, 09:10 PM | #10 | Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: Raleigh/Charlotte, NC Posts: 1,233 | could be your steering rack...... __________________ -Jeff | | | 02-06-2009, 11:09 PM | #11 | Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: state college, pa Posts: 3,431 | Quote: Originally Posted by themightyquinn While I don't doubt you, dave, I just find it really, really hard to believe that me having to wrestle the steering wheel to keep the car going where I want it to go is a result of the rear being out of whack. Wouldn't the subframe being toast result in a feeling of the rear not following the front? Not something directly steering-input related? | The rear wheels are going to steer on their own. Basically, tires will steer a car in whatever direction they're pointed (it's a friction thing). Generally, they steer forward neutrally. If everything is okay out back, the wheels are pointed forward, and you get no thrust-steering from the rear wheels. If they're out of whack, they'll track a little differently. __________________ I scream, you scream, we all scream for ZOMBIES. | | | 02-07-2009, 06:22 AM | #12 | Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Austin Posts: 3,059 | Basically the steering feels overly sensitive. You drive over a pebble, and it will either push or pull in that direction. It doesn't matter which side it's on. I can feel the turbulence from other cars, causing me to counter steer. I'm afraid aligning it will not solve our problem, but I'll go ahead and do it next week. __________________ Come get a ti-shirt Quote: From the e30 M3, evolved the e36. They were "Keepin it Real" when they introduced the 318ti ClubSport in '95 and the 318ti Sports from '96 to '99. After that... well nothing else really matters. ~Jess | | | | 02-08-2009, 02:52 AM | #13 | Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Annapolis/College Park Posts: 337 | ^Haha, maybe if we each take one component of the steering/suspension eventually someone's problems will go away. __________________ She's no longer mine, but I gotta keep the pic Current euro: Black MkIII VW Gti VR6 | | | 02-08-2009, 04:44 AM | #14 | Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Oxford, Ohio Posts: 868 | Quinn, The way the rear affects on center feel is simple... it's called rear steer and is caused by the trailing arm bushings and rear subframe bushings being sloppy. So the tail will move around subtly(dynamic rear toe and camber changes) and you have to correct with the steering wheel. So everything in the front feels solid when you check it, but the problem is still there. Thats what was happening with my car, and now it feels rock solid. Oops I just saw Aceyx said almost the same thing | | | 02-08-2009, 05:30 AM | #15 | Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Austin Posts: 3,059 | Quote: Originally Posted by themightyquinn ^Haha, maybe if we each take one component of the steering/suspension eventually someone's problems will go away. | Yea, I don't mind. I just want to get to the problem asap. I don't like having unpredictable steering. It's very dangerous when you need it to be accurate the most. __________________ Come get a ti-shirt Quote: From the e30 M3, evolved the e36. They were "Keepin it Real" when they introduced the 318ti ClubSport in '95 and the 318ti Sports from '96 to '99. After that... well nothing else really matters. ~Jess | | | | | | Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | | Posting Rules | You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | |