Shaking when braking
#46
Lexus Test Driver
#47
Pole Position
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A better alternative is to have your tire/wheel shop figure out which tire or wheel is causing the problem, and then replacing or truing the wheel if it is the problem, or replacing the tire if it is the issue. When one has a wheel/tire vibration, it is usually caused by one of the four tires, or one of the four wheels.
I fear that road force balancing simply masks the root cause of vibration issues. I rotate my tires at every oil change, so road force balancing doesn't work for me. Too, I don't mind not spending the extra money for it vs conventional balancing.
#48
Lexus Test Driver
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I'm not a fan of road force balancing for curing wheel/tire vibration issues. It works, but the next time you rotate your tires you will need another road force balance. In fact, even getting a flat repaired could result in bringing back your vibration if the tech doesn't get the tire clocked back on the wheel in the same place, or, doesn't get the wheel back on the hub in the same place. Marking the tire, wheel and hub to get everything back in the same orientation could avoid the issue to some degree, but typically, they re-balance after fixing a flat, so unless they road force balance it again, you may get your vibration back.
A better alternative is to have your tire/wheel shop figure out which tire or wheel is causing the problem, and then replacing or truing the wheel if it is the problem, or replacing the tire if it is the issue. When one has a wheel/tire vibration, it is usually caused by one of the four tires, or one of the four wheels.
I fear that road force balancing simply masks the root cause of vibration issues. I rotate my tires at every oil change, so road force balancing doesn't work for me. Too, I don't mind not spending the extra money for it vs conventional balancing.
A better alternative is to have your tire/wheel shop figure out which tire or wheel is causing the problem, and then replacing or truing the wheel if it is the problem, or replacing the tire if it is the issue. When one has a wheel/tire vibration, it is usually caused by one of the four tires, or one of the four wheels.
I fear that road force balancing simply masks the root cause of vibration issues. I rotate my tires at every oil change, so road force balancing doesn't work for me. Too, I don't mind not spending the extra money for it vs conventional balancing.
#49
Pole Position
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Road force balancing can cure a wheel or tire issue, but it won't fix it. If you get to the bottom of the issue without masking it, you can avoid future problems when you get a flat, rotate your tires, or replace your tires. If you accept the road force fix, you may be kicking the can down the road when your new wheels or tires are out of warranty. Thus, you could actually save $ in the long run by not going the road force route.
If you are dealing with a new vibration on older, all ready out-of-warranty, wheels or tires, it may be due to a wheel being damaged by a pothole, curb, or such. In that case, I would have the wheel trued for reasonable fee.
I'm not telling you what you should and shouldn't do, I'm just sharing ideas for those who might care to consider them.
#50
Driver
Thread Starter
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Originally Posted by mikemu30
Good to hear but now you're guaranteed the rotors will need to be replaced when the pads wear down.
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dlamb89
ES - 1st to 4th Gen (1990-2006)
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02-03-14 04:08 PM