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unstable driving... all over the place! scarry

Discussion in 'Intermediate CJ-5/6/7/8' started by pauldana, Apr 14, 2009.

  1. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Yeah, this is a drastic suggestion. You only need a few degrees of rotation to restore the factory caster setting. Steel shims work fine.
     
  2. nwedgar

    nwedgar Now with TBI!

    At what point are shims actually needed? 1" lift...2" lift...application specific? How does one know what degree shims are needed?
     
  3. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    The only way to know is to measure. Measuring caster is beyond most back-yard mechanics. You might be able to do it with an angle finder, but IMO the right thing to do is to have the suspension angles measured at an alignment shop. They'll set your toe-in, but will probably tell you they cannot adjust the caster and camber. Then add caster shims accordingly.
     
  4. pauldana

    pauldana pauldana

    This sounds like the most feasible reason... The caster thing should not influence the feel of steering, although I did have the rear axial taken off and the knuckles removed and reset to the new angle. Nothing to the front as I have the hubs unlocked and in 2H... therefor no spin ion the front drive-shaft. ... Feels like the jeep is mounted on a waterbed. ,,,, like if i turn it a little right it will turn a half-second later and then to much then compensate and so forth and so on... Also just driving down the road it feels way flooty...we are talking 30-40mph
     
  5. 2manytoys

    2manytoys Member

     
  6. LarryD

    LarryD Member

    If I understand correctly the main complaint is slow or no responce to the steering wheel. You describe turning the wheel and then when the vehicle finally responds it is oversteered. I am guessing this is possiblly caused by small amoutts of slack or wear in more than one location. In my case I had some wandering while driving on pavement at 30-40 MPH. I had slack in the steering box, the bell coupler and the lower steering colum bushing, There is also a possible source for slop or play in the u-joint on the steering shaft. As mentioned above have someone gentlly rock the steering weel and check these locations, then go on to ball joints tie rod ends and wheel bearings. I suspect you will need to adjust or replace parts in more than one location.
     
  7. pauldana

    pauldana pauldana

    I am going to pull the wheels this weekend and work on the slack in the wheel bearing first, I will post after the results... thx, p:)
     
  8. sterlclan

    sterlclan Member 2024 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    bad axle joints will give this symptom too.....
     
  9. cj6/442

    cj6/442 Sponsor

    I don't get that one ......... you can set your own toe-in,,, run a tape on the inside of the tires----measure from the side wall to side wall ----front to back and adjust drag link to toe tires in about 1/4"done it this way for years and tires wear really nice,,,,,sounds like more than one thing loose, has it death wobbled on you???? must be right on the edge.... that , will get your attention.!!
     
  10. sterlclan

    sterlclan Member 2024 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Ive had axle joints get seized/stiff (not on the jeep full size Chevy)and when turning they bind and release makes the vehicle swerve bad......and no no death wobble here just trying to help those who do.....
     
  11. CJ5Doc

    CJ5Doc Member

    I just got another allignment after adding 4 degree shims and look at the results:

    Caster
    Left Right
    before shims..... 1.3* 0.9*
    after 4* shims... 4.1* 3.7*

    What gives? Are the shims inaccurate? :rofl:

    With a 4.5 lift and 35 inch tires is 5 to 6 degrees what I want? My jeep definately rides alot better but after a turn the wheel does not come back to center... Will a couple more degrees of caster help correct this?
     
  12. cj6/442

    cj6/442 Sponsor

    could be the steering box it to tight also............
     
  13. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    4.1 - 1.3 = 2.8 degrees difference
    3.7 - 0.9 = 2.8 degrees difference

    Yes, I'd guess the shims are inaccurate. Where did you get them? Did you measure them before you installed them?
     
  14. CJ5Doc

    CJ5Doc Member

    Not sure where they came from.... I'll check to see if they are stamped. Timgr do you think I should increase my caster to 5 - 6 degrees?
     
  15. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Hmm. I don't know. Maybe someone here who has increased their caster to 5-6 degrees can comment. I don't think it would hurt anything.

    Do you have one of the shims? Measure the length and the thickness at each end, and post it.
     
  16. barely3

    barely3 Spending my retirement

    I was having controllability issues (especially when accelerating or decelerating) and found out that my rear axle "U" bolts were loose allowing the rear axle to walk a few inches each way whan driving. I replaced the "U" bolts and virtually eliminated the problem.
     
  17. CJ5Doc

    CJ5Doc Member

    all new U bolts and very tight.... thanks though
     
  18. Mugzilla

    Mugzilla Member

    Put a buddy in the drivers seat. Pop hood. Stand in front of Jeep. Have buddy turn the steering wheel left and right.

    Look for:

    -Amount of steering shaft rotation before steering box begins to react. (I cleaned up this slop with the Flaming River replacement steering shaft on my 75...)

    -Once steering box is moving, how much does it twist the frame? (My next project. When the steering wheel is turned, my steering BOX immediately begins to move the tires. HOWEVER, it also twists the front of my frame. My frame acts like a cross between a wet noodle and a steering dampener! I am going to brace the box...)
     
  19. lynn

    lynn Time machine / Early CJ5 HR Rep Staff Member

    The above quote is blatently incorrect for the type of shims we are discussing. In fact the shims we are talking about increase the positive caster angle (putting the upper ball joint farther behind the vertical axle centerline) and as a result worsen the pinion-to-tcase angle. I do agree that rewelding the perches or knuckles is a better fix... but for most of us, steel shims of up to 5 to 6 degrees work perfectly fine.

    After I added a Skyjacker 2.5" lift and a '74 D30 axle to the '71, the Jeep was uncontrollable over 30 mph. Literally could not keep the rig in my lane at 35 mph.
    I took it for alignment. Caster was 1.0 and .90.
    As mentioned above, the shop said they could not fix it.
    With some research I learned that 5 to 7 degrees positive was ideal for my Jeep. I looked into steel shims, then had a set of 5 degree shims made.
    I installed these as previously described with the fat end forward (thereby tilting the top ball joint rearward and the pinion slightly down).
    After that installation 10 yrs ago, and to this day, the Jeep tracks straight and sweet at 75 mph or when being towed, has excellent return to center, no unusual tire werar, and did not negatively impact the front driveline angle as it has been used extensively offroad with no ujoint or front output failures.

    Insufficient caster angle is but one cause of the wandering described by the OP. Many other causes are discussed above.
    In my case, I knew it was a caster angle angle issue as I had completely rebuilt the '74 axle with all new components before installation.

    To the original poster: Be sure that your wheel bearings are good, the spindle nuts are tight, your steering box is securely mounted on a solid bracket, your spring plate nuts are tight on the ubolts, the steering shaft has no play at either end, your ball joints are good and your tie rod ends are good. Search on this forum or other places on the net to learn how to perform these verifications.
    Or take it to a trusted mechanic... he can check all of the above in less than an hour.

    After all of these things are confirmed to be acceptable or repaired, the check your caster angle, or have it checked by a competent shop.
    If your caster angle is less than 5 and you still have control issues, then consider one of the welding solutions discussed, or steel shims to provide you with a caster angle of 5 to 7 degrees positive (I targeted 6 degrees)
    Here is one source for steel shims that some of us have used:
    http://4crawler.com/4x4/ForSale/Shims.shtml

    Good luck, keep us posted!
     
    Last edited: Jun 16, 2009
  20. pauldana

    pauldana pauldana

    ok, I'm back had here is what I have and what I have done....o, and please remember, this is a 72, thus no a-arm and ball-joints.
    1. standard alignment
    2. steering stabilizer
    3. frame to axial stabilizer
    4. checked all bolts for tight
    5. new bushings in the leaf springs...
    6. a new rancho 2" lift kit w/new springs and shocks,

    still way unstable if over 35mph.....

    please explain this... "Death wobble"

    I am afraid to go on the hwy...

    Steering box still moves a little but all bolts are tight.... Can you buy a new box? this is a power steering unit.

    thx, Paul
     
    Last edited: Aug 25, 2009