Howl/whine/scream in cond weather: Hanger bearing Driveline
'04 3/4 ton 4 door 4wd 6 speed long box.
I've been wondering when this would come up, or was I the only one with this problem? The first winter, below freezing, around 18K miles, the howl would hang in there for about a mile or so, and then go away. Low speed, around 15 to 35, with various harmonics. The dealer spent 3 weeks with it, and couldn't find anything. I bought a cheap stethoscope and put the truck rear up on jack stands, had the wife in the cab while I crawled around underside to see what was howling. Quiet transmission, and rear-end. The hanger bearing on the driveline was screaming, had to be dry/stiff grease. It was a major fight to convince the dealer to replace the bearing, they had never heard of this and Dodge denied any record of failures. When they finally replaced the bearing, they also wrecked the transmission seal, and I had oil all over the bottom of the truck when I got home. They did fix it, and the noise was gone! In fact it was a little quieter than it ever was, even new. I guess the bearing was dinged, or flawed from day one.
Now it's the second winter, around 30K miles, and it's doing it again! I've been wondering weather to go back to the dealer, or to a real driveline shop (big trucks) and get a real hanger bearing, not some Mexican piece of junk (can I say that?).
Back in '76 I had a similar problem with a Honda civic, the Japanese apparently never thought about their grease and what would happen with a North American winter. The rear wheels wouldn't turn for the first 2 miles at -20 degrees.
David