HHhuntitall
TDR MEMBER
Texis,
You're telling us the tires have flat spots, and you wonder what the bouncing situation is? Now think about that, if the tire is not round, what is it doing? I'm not trying to be smart, I'm just asking you... ... . if it's not round, what does it do? Very likely to be intermittent because the sidewall flex takes a lot of the bounce out of the tire. Occasionally, the tires will have flat spots opposite each other, and they will "dribble" each other. One goes up, pushing down on the other one, which bounces up, pushing the other down; you've got a straight axle back there, and the shocks only take out sooo much play in the axle. Try airing down the tires and seeing if that helps. Also, if you have something to wiegh the truck down, say a bunch of feed sacks, wood, whatever; if you load it(not while aired down!) does it go away? That's gonna be the tires. And I'm betting you have Michelin's if you have that many miles on the tires, so watch for dry rot and cord separations, which look like balloon spots in the tread and sidewall. Oh, and you can try jacking up the truck and spinning the tire while watching it, watching for any vertical leap or humps.
jdrury,
Are they rear drum or rear disk brakes? While I'd suspect ABS, it could be the hydro-boost brake assembly behind the master cylinder. If it's overtraveling or bypassing, it could allow the steering pump to pressure up the chamber, and effectively "press the pedal for you. " Be sure to check your fluid levels in the power steering reservoir, and make sure there are not leaks in the brake master clyinder assembly. I've seen some that leak whenever the pedal is used hard for long periods of time(pulling a trailer), and then they'll start fading really bad a few hours later. When you pull them apart, the front of the assembly is full of steering fluid, showing where it's been leaking... .
You're telling us the tires have flat spots, and you wonder what the bouncing situation is? Now think about that, if the tire is not round, what is it doing? I'm not trying to be smart, I'm just asking you... ... . if it's not round, what does it do? Very likely to be intermittent because the sidewall flex takes a lot of the bounce out of the tire. Occasionally, the tires will have flat spots opposite each other, and they will "dribble" each other. One goes up, pushing down on the other one, which bounces up, pushing the other down; you've got a straight axle back there, and the shocks only take out sooo much play in the axle. Try airing down the tires and seeing if that helps. Also, if you have something to wiegh the truck down, say a bunch of feed sacks, wood, whatever; if you load it(not while aired down!) does it go away? That's gonna be the tires. And I'm betting you have Michelin's if you have that many miles on the tires, so watch for dry rot and cord separations, which look like balloon spots in the tread and sidewall. Oh, and you can try jacking up the truck and spinning the tire while watching it, watching for any vertical leap or humps.
jdrury,
Are they rear drum or rear disk brakes? While I'd suspect ABS, it could be the hydro-boost brake assembly behind the master cylinder. If it's overtraveling or bypassing, it could allow the steering pump to pressure up the chamber, and effectively "press the pedal for you. " Be sure to check your fluid levels in the power steering reservoir, and make sure there are not leaks in the brake master clyinder assembly. I've seen some that leak whenever the pedal is used hard for long periods of time(pulling a trailer), and then they'll start fading really bad a few hours later. When you pull them apart, the front of the assembly is full of steering fluid, showing where it's been leaking... .