Need help with torque steer., Searched, searched more, searched again, gave up. |
Need help with torque steer., Searched, searched more, searched again, gave up. |
Apr 15, 2013 - 1:54 PM |
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Moderator Joined Jun 29, '08 From Denver Currently Offline Reputation: 59 (100%) |
I've been pulling my hair out over this issue for several months. I can't figure out what it is. I'll start with the background details.
I have the factory LSD S54 tranny on my BEAMS. Never had any issues out of it. However, bloodMoney noticed a droning noise related to my gearing that I hadn't noticed. It started only on slow acceleration, where I usually accelerated quick enough that I flew right past the noise and never heard it. This slight issue has never seemed to be anything more than just a noise, but now is in all 5 gears, pretty noticeable up until 3,000 rpm when it suddenly goes silent. Not sure if it's related to the torque steer at all. It makes a wah-wah-wah-wah-wah-wah noise, similar to that of old worn out tires. It needs to be said that when I turn the wheels and hit the throttle, my wheels are locked together and turn just like they should. Absolutely no issues when I turn, just when I'm going in a straight line. Last summer, I replaced my front lower control arm bushings for poly bushings, new Racing Beat rear end links and Two's R Us front end links, Moog ball joints, and more importantly, bought Dustin's ADR Vision rims with 225/45/17's and coupled them with 10 mm spacers. The front end links, rims, and spacers came last, in that order. Some time after installing the rims and spacers (not sure how long, it was a month or two) I noticed if I accelerated hard, the car pulled right. Let off the gas, it would straighten back out, meaning it pulled back to the left quickly. Eventually, it became any acceleration at all, hit a pretty good bump and it would go to the right, but if I was just cruising or decelerating, no issues at all. Only on acceleration. Typical torque steer. Late February or early March, I picked up Noberto's 17" Caldina rims. They're just a little bit lighter with 215/45/17's. When I swapped rims out, I noticed a badly torn passenger side axle boot. Problem found, I thought. Drove with the Caldina rims a few times while waiting for a pair of new axles to come in, and I immediately noticed that torque steer was greatly reduced, but still present. Now it only pulls in 1st-3rd gears. The high gears are relatively trouble free. I got under the car, replaced both axles, and thought I was ready to rock and roll. Wrong, problem was still there. I've put entirely too much time into this and come up with nothing. I've had a few theories, including worn out LSD. I'm aware that helical LSD's do need to be rebuilt around 90,000 miles, which is close to what mine has on it. However, a worn out helical diff acts like an open diff and does not do anything like what mine is doing. So I thought maybe something in the suspension was loose. Wrong again, it's all torqued to spec. Motor mount issue, maybe? Perhaps my motor was able to twist around on acceleration? Nada. My motor mounts, while not brand new, all pass a visual inspection. No cracking, all bolted down tight, and I can't get the motor to move when I try to force it around. So I gave up on actually looking at the car and resorted to teh intarwebz. The only thing I could find is possible due to wheel offset. It's very possible, since the issue started some time after installing the spacers. I don't know the offset of the ADR Visions, but I know the offset of the Caldina rims is +45 so I'm currently at about +35 offset. Plenty of Celicas running around with +35 and no issues. I'm at a total loss here, I give up. Anybody have any suggestions? I'm all ears. This post has been edited by richee3: Apr 15, 2013 - 1:55 PM -------------------- "Employ your time in improving yourself by other men's writings, so that you shall gain easily what others labored hard for." -Socrates. Even Socrates told us to use the search button!
2006 Aston Martin V8 Vantage. 1998 Celica GT- BEAMS Swapped. 2022 4Runner TRD Off Road Prenium. 2021 GMC Sierra AT4. |
Apr 21, 2013 - 3:24 AM |
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Enthusiast Joined Jun 2, '10 From Davenport, Florida Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
i had a similar noise on my front end... it was the very start of my wheel bearings going bad due to a bad hub. it didnt sound like bearings at all but after the steering knuckle was replaced the noise was gone.
btw ... before i got to the steering knuckle as the problem i had replaced the transmission, clutch, axles and carrier bearing trying to figure it out cause it didn't sound like wheel bearings This post has been edited by b22ri22an: Apr 21, 2013 - 3:26 AM -------------------- |
Apr 24, 2013 - 8:53 AM |
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Moderator Joined Jun 29, '08 From Denver Currently Offline Reputation: 59 (100%) |
Thanks Brian. It's definitely worth looking into. I haven't felt any play in the bearings yet, but I know my passenger side hub does have some minor scoring. It's possible that the bigger rims with spacers aren't doing that hub and two year old bearing any favors. My noise sounds like exhaust resonance but I haven't been able to track it down yet. It won't make the noise in neutral.
-------------------- "Employ your time in improving yourself by other men's writings, so that you shall gain easily what others labored hard for." -Socrates. Even Socrates told us to use the search button!
2006 Aston Martin V8 Vantage. 1998 Celica GT- BEAMS Swapped. 2022 4Runner TRD Off Road Prenium. 2021 GMC Sierra AT4. |
Apr 25, 2013 - 12:56 AM |
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Enthusiast Joined Jan 4, '12 From US Currently Offline Reputation: 6 (100%) |
I think the stock LSD isn't helical, which doesn't "wear out". I think you meant clutch-type, or viscous. Those do wear out.
Did you make sure the input and output shaft bearings were good? Are your other two mounts good? -------------------- 1993 Celica GT Coupe - sold
1994 Celica GT Liftback |
Apr 26, 2013 - 4:13 PM |
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Enthusiast Joined Jun 2, '10 From Davenport, Florida Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
my problem made the noise in all gears and neutral while moving but the noise was quieter while coasting in neautral
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Apr 28, 2013 - 8:11 AM |
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Moderator Joined Oct 1, '02 From fall river, ma Currently Offline Reputation: 13 (100%) |
[Quote] It needs to be said that when I turn the wheels and hit the throttle, my wheels are locked together and turn just like they should. Absolutely no issues when I turn, just when I'm going in a straight line.[\quote]
That sounds like the opposite of what it should be doing. It should lock when your close to going straight, or going straight, and slip when cornering. You shouldn't be getting any "torque steer" with the LSD . -------------------- Former Team 5SFTE pro member ;)
13.6@108MPH, 5SFTE Powered |
Apr 28, 2013 - 3:32 PM |
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Moderator Joined Jun 29, '08 From Denver Currently Offline Reputation: 59 (100%) |
I think the stock LSD isn't helical, which doesn't "wear out". I think you meant clutch-type, or viscous. Those do wear out. Did you make sure the input and output shaft bearings were good? Are your other two mounts good? I do definitely have the OEM helical diff. I know OBX helical diffs (which suck) wear out and need to be rebuilt, and I've found a nugget of information (sadly, from Wikipedia) that says that helical diffs technically need to be rebuilt, and they begin to act as open differentials. Nowhere does any source say that I should get anything like I am. I'm not even sure my torque steer is related to my diff. The diff seems like it could be working perfectly and something else is causing this, but then the same could be said of all other steering/suspension components. Input and output bearings are good, as are all four motor mounts. QUOTE It needs to be said that when I turn the wheels and hit the throttle, my wheels are locked together and turn just like they should. Absolutely no issues when I turn, just when I'm going in a straight line. That sounds like the opposite of what it should be doing. It should lock when your close to going straight, or going straight, and slip when cornering. You shouldn't be getting any "torque steer" with the LSD . That's exactly what gets me. I didn't have any torque steer with the LSD and stock rims/tires. It didn't start until I bought Dustin's ADR's and spacers, and got a little better when I switched to Noberto's Caldina rims. However, the noise that I get up until 3k RPM started last summer and has since gotten louder, so I suspect my culprit has something to do either with that humming/droning noise or something to do with the spacers. However, plenty of members here have +35 offset with no issues, with or without spacers. I'm totally stumped. I appreciate any and all help, any pointers, tips, etc. It should be noted that my gas mileage started decreasing when the noise started, going from 33-34 highway down to 26-28. So I'm probably getting some rolling drag resistance somewhere. That's another thing that makes me suspect LSD. I used to have a couple of spare S54's sitting around but I've sold them off, so I can't exactly swap those out to test out that theory. -------------------- "Employ your time in improving yourself by other men's writings, so that you shall gain easily what others labored hard for." -Socrates. Even Socrates told us to use the search button!
2006 Aston Martin V8 Vantage. 1998 Celica GT- BEAMS Swapped. 2022 4Runner TRD Off Road Prenium. 2021 GMC Sierra AT4. |
Apr 28, 2013 - 3:50 PM |
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Enthusiast Joined Jan 4, '12 From US Currently Offline Reputation: 6 (100%) |
I think the stock LSD isn't helical, which doesn't "wear out". I think you meant clutch-type, or viscous. Those do wear out. Did you make sure the input and output shaft bearings were good? Are your other two mounts good? I do definitely have the OEM helical diff. I know OBX helical diffs (which suck) wear out and need to be rebuilt, and I've found a nugget of information (sadly, from Wikipedia) that says that helical diffs technically need to be rebuilt, and they begin to act as open differentials. Nowhere does any source say that I should get anything like I am. I'm not even sure my torque steer is related to my diff. The diff seems like it could be working perfectly and something else is causing this, but then the same could be said of all other steering/suspension components. Input and output bearings are good, as are all four motor mounts. Helical diffs don't wear out. If that was the case, you'd have to replace your transmission gears as often as you would the differential, and you don't need to rebuild or replace either. Most stock differentials are clutch-type, not helical (E153 OEM LSD is clutch-type, so is TRD, and so is Kaaz IIRC. The only two helical diffs are quaife and OBX and neither need to be rebuilt) Clutch-type differentials wear out and start acting like open differentials because the clutches no longer grab like they're supposed to because they're worn out. Helical differentials are composed of gears, not clutches, for the limited-slip action. Just making that clear since you seem to have them confused. This post has been edited by Syaoran: Apr 28, 2013 - 3:53 PM -------------------- 1993 Celica GT Coupe - sold
1994 Celica GT Liftback |
Apr 28, 2013 - 4:24 PM |
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Moderator Joined Jun 29, '08 From Denver Currently Offline Reputation: 59 (100%) |
Nope, I know the clutch-type diffs need to be rebuilt. My only source of info for helicals ever needing to be rebuilt are Wikipedia (poor source, I know) and some Honda forums where those guys say that they installed OBX diffs and something broke so they had to rebuild them. TRD actually made both a clutch-type and helical diff that will fit our cars, took me a while to figure out that they made two different kinds there. Anyway, my LSD itself seems to lock the wheels together just fine when I turn the wheels and take a stab at the throttle, which shouldn't happen if it was actually worn out. My LSD may very well not have anything to do with my torque steer issue. I'm just coming up with theories then trying to research them, which is turning up with nothing. Basically, all I've found is that wheel offset can cause torque steer (which I'm nowhere near that point, +35 is fine on a Celica) and then I figured my LSD may be acting up and transmitting more power to the driver wheel, causing me to steer right when I accelerate. I'm not ready to take the car to a shop to let them cruise around in it just so they can start making up problems and replacing things only to make no headway, yet I'm out of ideas of what could possibly cause a motor with only 154 ft lbs of torque and no previous history of any such thing to do this.
Brian's theory of a wheel bearing does hold some water, I can see where a wheel bearing not rolling freely would cause this, but it should affect me at cruising and deceleration just the same as acceleration, but the car tracks straight and true when I'm cruising or slowing down. When I turn the wheels, the issue disappears as well. It's only in straight lines. The only things I've changed are the poly control arm bushings, Twos R Us front end links, Moog ball joints, wheels, and spacers. So the issue could potentially lie in the offset, bushings, or in some component of the drivetrain. I hate to start throwing money at this issue until I have a pretty good idea of where to start, but I am truly stumped. The car is perfectly drivable, but this is definitely a nuisance and robs a lot of enjoyment from driving the car. I guess I'm still another three weeks without the car anyway, so plenty of time to brainstorm. Edit: bloodMoney and alltracNyx have both heard the humming noise from my car (they were actually the ones that heard it and pointed it out to me) and they did some research. They found something that alludes that some older Toyota trannies do make a humming noise and that it's no big deal, they keep working just fine. The only difference between my JDM S54 and the USDM S54 is the helical diff and my final drive is 4.18 vs the USDM 4.176. So there's no real reason that it should be any different than a USDM S54, but I suppose the LSD has close to 100,000 miles now and could just me making a noise and nothing else wrong. I don't know, I'm pulling my hair out trying to figure out what the noise is, why the car pulls, and if they are even related. This post has been edited by richee3: Apr 28, 2013 - 4:34 PM -------------------- "Employ your time in improving yourself by other men's writings, so that you shall gain easily what others labored hard for." -Socrates. Even Socrates told us to use the search button!
2006 Aston Martin V8 Vantage. 1998 Celica GT- BEAMS Swapped. 2022 4Runner TRD Off Road Prenium. 2021 GMC Sierra AT4. |
Apr 30, 2013 - 6:51 AM |
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Enthusiast Joined Oct 29, '11 From Haltom City, Texas Currently Offline Reputation: 1 (100%) |
Lol if you had less caster on your front wheels you wouldnt experience torque steering.
Have you put the car on jackstands and tried turning the wheels by hand? You should be able to feel anything like a bad bearing turning it by hand. If you try to turn a rear wheel by hand on my 64 chevy's positrac, the driveshaft will spin a little bit before the differential locks and the opposite wheel spins the opposite way you are turning your wheel. Maybe yours does the same thing and if it doesnt its malfunctioning? |
Apr 30, 2013 - 9:17 PM |
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Moderator Joined Jun 29, '08 From Denver Currently Offline Reputation: 59 (100%) |
Lol if you had less caster on your front wheels you wouldnt experience torque steering. Have you put the car on jackstands and tried turning the wheels by hand? You should be able to feel anything like a bad bearing turning it by hand. If you try to turn a rear wheel by hand on my 64 chevy's positrac, the driveshaft will spin a little bit before the differential locks and the opposite wheel spins the opposite way you are turning your wheel. Maybe yours does the same thing and if it doesnt its malfunctioning? Turning the wheels by hand with the car on jack stands will yield exactly the same results as an open diff. I don't know why, but this diff will work like an open diff if one (or both) wheels come off the ground, sending power through the path of least resistance and will turn only one wheel. I definitely appreciate all the good advice and brainstorming, keep the ideas coming! Eventually we'll get to the bottom of this. I'll probably start in a few weeks with removing the spacers/studs and see what happens. If no change, that rules that out. It'll be at least a month before I can make any changes though. -------------------- "Employ your time in improving yourself by other men's writings, so that you shall gain easily what others labored hard for." -Socrates. Even Socrates told us to use the search button!
2006 Aston Martin V8 Vantage. 1998 Celica GT- BEAMS Swapped. 2022 4Runner TRD Off Road Prenium. 2021 GMC Sierra AT4. |
Apr 30, 2013 - 9:54 PM |
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Enthusiast Joined Aug 4, '06 From Chicagoland Currently Offline Reputation: 9 (100%) |
Daniel, jack the car up and shake the front end down to see if you have any play. Anywhere. If you do, fix it.
Didn't you also get poly engine mounts? We have them front and rear on the 165 and at 50mph she dreams pretty loud like that. I think you may have the issue that you've tightened everything up SO much that you are hearing the natural frequency of the trans/ drivetrain. Maybe try swapping out to non poly motor mounts to see if it solves the issue. I think it will just mask the noise, but it doesn't hurt to try. I have a strong feeling that your mileage issue is separate from this nose though. We can discuss more at the Midwest meet. I'll take you out in Patty and you can hear what I'm talking about. -------------------- ~bloodMoney
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