Tuesday night I noticed some bucking during light acceleration in 4th gear. The whole truck was vibrating very quickly. It seemed to shake from the floor up. The steering wheel was not shaking but even the hood was shaking with the vibration. It seemed to be worse on rough roads and only occurred while accelerating very lightly around 40 miles per hour.
Today, Saturday, I was towing near 7,000 lbs worth of trailer loaded with Highland coos around the Ozarks and the shuddering was worse. I started while the trailer was empty, only weighing around 4,000 lbs. The shaking now occurs at higher speeds roughly 65-70, though it also happened once in the mid 50s. Never happened at lower speeds today but throttle input was greater due to the load.
The shudder has become far more aggressive with the whole truck shaking violently. As far as noise, the sound of the whole truck shaking is quite loud so I couldn't aurally pinpoint a source, just a loud roar. We pulled over at one point to check things out since the problem was so consistent and scary. 4 wheel drive is not engaged, the rear driveshaft seems normal with no slop in the u-joints when shaking by hand and watching it with lots of testing in a lot.
I'm suspicious of the transmission. I would expect that if the transmission is slipping that the temperature would increase. It did seem higher than usual, around 145 on the interstate though it never exceeded about 171 degrees even when pulling through muddy pastures, water holes, and steep hills off road. The transmission used to run under 135 even in the summer. Ambient temperature was about 63 degrees today so it was not exceptionally warm.
Fuel pressure is mostly in the upper 20s but is not varying enough to be the cause, I think. Tires look perfectly smooth while driving. Using a laser thermometer gun my rear differential only got up to about 180, as were my rotors. I have sticking caliper squeal from the rear but I feel no pull. I find it hard to imagine a sticking caliper that is not slowing the vehicle could cause such a harsh vibration.
The way the truck is bucking it feels like a loose throttle spring. I say this primarily because the shudder is usually triggered by rougher terrain such as a bridge, around 70 mph, under 25-35% light throttle acceleration. The bucking continues after the initial vibration until I either accelerate or decelerate.
I've tried downshifting into 3rd gear while maintaining speed and the vibration ceases. This again makes me suspicious of 4th gear. There are no changes in shifting behavior, timing, or feel. The only slippage indicated by my PCS TCU is when I shift between 3rd and 4th gears for just a second during the shift. The transmission oil is full and still has great color, no odor or debris. Brian of BTS told me not to worry about changing the filter or oil until it looked bad so I never have in the years I've been using this 4R100.
I'm also considering the problem could be the driveshaft going out of balance. Or perhaps my engine's timing or GSK has slipped. There is no engine smoke and vehicle speed and engine RPMs do not bounce with the truck, which surprises me since the vibration is so harsh it is impossible for me to keep my foot steady on the throttle.
I'm hoping someone may have had a similar experience and found the cure. Otherwise, does anyone have any other ideas or steps I should take toward the diagnosis? I am not sure if I should try to find a good diesel shop or drivetrain shop. I don't know of a good one of either in the area but money is extremely tight so it would be best if I can figure this out and repair myself. For the moment, I'm puzzled.
Today, Saturday, I was towing near 7,000 lbs worth of trailer loaded with Highland coos around the Ozarks and the shuddering was worse. I started while the trailer was empty, only weighing around 4,000 lbs. The shaking now occurs at higher speeds roughly 65-70, though it also happened once in the mid 50s. Never happened at lower speeds today but throttle input was greater due to the load.
The shudder has become far more aggressive with the whole truck shaking violently. As far as noise, the sound of the whole truck shaking is quite loud so I couldn't aurally pinpoint a source, just a loud roar. We pulled over at one point to check things out since the problem was so consistent and scary. 4 wheel drive is not engaged, the rear driveshaft seems normal with no slop in the u-joints when shaking by hand and watching it with lots of testing in a lot.
I'm suspicious of the transmission. I would expect that if the transmission is slipping that the temperature would increase. It did seem higher than usual, around 145 on the interstate though it never exceeded about 171 degrees even when pulling through muddy pastures, water holes, and steep hills off road. The transmission used to run under 135 even in the summer. Ambient temperature was about 63 degrees today so it was not exceptionally warm.
Fuel pressure is mostly in the upper 20s but is not varying enough to be the cause, I think. Tires look perfectly smooth while driving. Using a laser thermometer gun my rear differential only got up to about 180, as were my rotors. I have sticking caliper squeal from the rear but I feel no pull. I find it hard to imagine a sticking caliper that is not slowing the vehicle could cause such a harsh vibration.
The way the truck is bucking it feels like a loose throttle spring. I say this primarily because the shudder is usually triggered by rougher terrain such as a bridge, around 70 mph, under 25-35% light throttle acceleration. The bucking continues after the initial vibration until I either accelerate or decelerate.
I've tried downshifting into 3rd gear while maintaining speed and the vibration ceases. This again makes me suspicious of 4th gear. There are no changes in shifting behavior, timing, or feel. The only slippage indicated by my PCS TCU is when I shift between 3rd and 4th gears for just a second during the shift. The transmission oil is full and still has great color, no odor or debris. Brian of BTS told me not to worry about changing the filter or oil until it looked bad so I never have in the years I've been using this 4R100.
I'm also considering the problem could be the driveshaft going out of balance. Or perhaps my engine's timing or GSK has slipped. There is no engine smoke and vehicle speed and engine RPMs do not bounce with the truck, which surprises me since the vibration is so harsh it is impossible for me to keep my foot steady on the throttle.
I'm hoping someone may have had a similar experience and found the cure. Otherwise, does anyone have any other ideas or steps I should take toward the diagnosis? I am not sure if I should try to find a good diesel shop or drivetrain shop. I don't know of a good one of either in the area but money is extremely tight so it would be best if I can figure this out and repair myself. For the moment, I'm puzzled.