After thousands of dollars spent on all known upgrades and new steering/suspension parts, my '96 is still going through left front tires like crazy.
Last week, at 70 mph, I had my second MAJOR blowout of the left-front tire in the past year. This time, the entire tread came off like a recap and jammed up in the wheelwell throwing me instantly across two lanes of traffic and into the median before finally ripping loose and allowing me to steer again. It took my wheelwell liner, horns, wiring, front bumper & fascia, running board, mud flap, and front fender with it when it finally broke free. It was very thick tread still.
I can rotate the tires and/or put a new tire on, and everything feels good for a short time. Then a steady shake and wobble begins to manifest. Just enough to be annoying at first, but steadily increasing while at the same time progressing slowly enough to make me "get used to it". It will last for months that way, but has twice now ended with the same tire blowing out spectactularly. Last time, it was my 16 year old son driving on the interstate when it happened.
Something about that constant shake and harmonic is causing the tires on that left front position to separate and blow. Believe it or not, the tire carcass still held all of it's air and I limped the truck 1 1/2 miles down the shoulder to my exit that way.
It must be in the wheel bearing unit hub crap. Everything else has been replaced and upgraded. I added grease zerks to the hubs when I did the frontend. Normally those unit bearing hubs just fail, but I think this one is determined to keep right on going (and shaking) as long as I keep feeding it tires (and new body parts).
I parked the truck for now and have reverted back to my trusty 80's Chevy with leaf springs and a front axle with real tapered bearings, spindles, and lockouts. I forgot just how sweet a well-designed and built truck can be to drive and steer... what a huge difference. That entire truck cost me less than half of what it cost just to rebuild that Dodge's front steering and suspension.
The dodge is going to get someone killed if I don't permanently solve this issue. If the last blowout had happened just a few seconds sooner before I broke into the clear ahead of some truck traffic, it might have already. My last resort will be to finish my ford hub, lockouts, live-bearing & spindle & brakes conversion. I use the truck so much that I keep putting that off. I just can't any longer.
Last week, at 70 mph, I had my second MAJOR blowout of the left-front tire in the past year. This time, the entire tread came off like a recap and jammed up in the wheelwell throwing me instantly across two lanes of traffic and into the median before finally ripping loose and allowing me to steer again. It took my wheelwell liner, horns, wiring, front bumper & fascia, running board, mud flap, and front fender with it when it finally broke free. It was very thick tread still.
I can rotate the tires and/or put a new tire on, and everything feels good for a short time. Then a steady shake and wobble begins to manifest. Just enough to be annoying at first, but steadily increasing while at the same time progressing slowly enough to make me "get used to it". It will last for months that way, but has twice now ended with the same tire blowing out spectactularly. Last time, it was my 16 year old son driving on the interstate when it happened.
Something about that constant shake and harmonic is causing the tires on that left front position to separate and blow. Believe it or not, the tire carcass still held all of it's air and I limped the truck 1 1/2 miles down the shoulder to my exit that way.
It must be in the wheel bearing unit hub crap. Everything else has been replaced and upgraded. I added grease zerks to the hubs when I did the frontend. Normally those unit bearing hubs just fail, but I think this one is determined to keep right on going (and shaking) as long as I keep feeding it tires (and new body parts).
I parked the truck for now and have reverted back to my trusty 80's Chevy with leaf springs and a front axle with real tapered bearings, spindles, and lockouts. I forgot just how sweet a well-designed and built truck can be to drive and steer... what a huge difference. That entire truck cost me less than half of what it cost just to rebuild that Dodge's front steering and suspension.
The dodge is going to get someone killed if I don't permanently solve this issue. If the last blowout had happened just a few seconds sooner before I broke into the clear ahead of some truck traffic, it might have already. My last resort will be to finish my ford hub, lockouts, live-bearing & spindle & brakes conversion. I use the truck so much that I keep putting that off. I just can't any longer.