Some may remember I set about revitalizing a 1998 Mercedes E430 last summer. One thing I've noted is that it can tend to make a good bit of noise while driving. I would call it a growl. It's coming from the front and varies with speed. My E430 s RWD and not a 4Matic. So it's not a front diff. It's not clunky, so not cv related. It doesn't seem to vary with engine speed, but rather vehicle speed.
I just pulled her out after a winter's slumber. Time to get back at it! A pic for fun.
Originally posted by 21bubba: First thing to do is rotate the tires.
Brand new tires. I believe it was doing it before the tires. Then I got new Continental Pure Contacts. Then I thought maybe the tires were the problem, so I had them switch them under Conti's guarantee to a new version of Conti (the Pro Contact). No difference.
One thing you could try is finding an open area and swerving back and forth at speed. If it is a bearing, it will change as the bearing loads/unloads. Look at the bearing on the outside of the turn when the noise is loudest.
Posts: 9447 | Location: Somewhere looking for ammo that nobody has at a place I haven't been to for a pistol I couldn't live without... | Registered: December 02, 2014
It sounds funny but try and find a quiet neighborhood and slowly drive with the windows down and listen to the noise echo off of the curb. It will give you a better idea of what the noise sounds like. A high pitch noise is often a bearing. It will usually make a low growling or crunching noise when turning.
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Posts: 3661 | Location: TX | Registered: October 08, 2005
IF they are bearings, replace them NOW, before they destroy any spindles they may be mounted on, particularly if the spindle is not a seperate bolt-on part, ie cast as a single unit wheel mounting assembly etc. Ask me how I know. THAT part can be somehwere between expensice to non-existent.
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Posts: 8985 | Location: Nowhere the constitution is not honored | Registered: February 01, 2008
Originally posted by wrightd: IF they are bearings, replace them NOW, before they destroy any spindles they may be mounted on, particularly if the spindle is not a seperate bolt-on part, ie cast as a single unit wheel mounting assembly etc. Ask me how I know. THAT part can be somehwere between expensice to non-existent.
10 or 12 years ago, I was in the back of a taxi on Houston's Hardy tollway and the driver was doing about 80. A sedan passed on and it was making a lot of noise so it caught my attention. All of the sudden, I saw sparks on driver's front wheel on the sedan and it immediately veered left and smashed into the concrete median.
This was shortly after some major flooding (Tropical Storm Allison) and many people drove through deep water or their car ended up parked in deep water. I've always suspected the grease left the bearing which cause the bearings to seize, the sparks, and veering hard left.
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Posts: 23810 | Location: Northern Suburbs of Houston | Registered: November 14, 2005
Thanks everyone! Looking at the YouTubez, it looks like you need some specialized tools (and likely experience) to do that right. Sooo... Back to the dealer. Taking all of the neglect out of this one has been a process, but it's starting to reward me in being a lovely car to drive. Couple bits left to tackle.
As far as rotating by hand, or shaking to see if loose, it may or may not help. I have a 2011 Tacoma, it would start making a "tire" noise esp 35-45mph... then continue to growl, on down to stopping. Brake, take transmission out of gear, turn, nothing affected the noise.
Turned by hand, shook, nothing...
Replaced anyway, smooth and quiet. :-)
Less than $150 on amazon for complete hub as well, same as autozone etc, but $30-50 less.
Good luck!
Posts: 1044 | Location: Virginia | Registered: October 29, 2007
Making noise when it spins while jacked up does not necessarily mean it's a wheel bearing. It can be brake pad drag or a stuck caliper. To check wheel bearings, you need to jack it up and grab the tire at 12 and 6 o'clock, then wiggle for play. If it just started, you can probably adjust and repack it.
I've had to snug wheel bearings before, but, if gets to the point that it's noisy when you're driving, it's probably past the point of no return. When that happened to the car in my avatar, I just made it home and don't think I could have made it one more driveway length before catastrophic failure.
Posts: 3755 | Location: Cave Creek, AZ | Registered: October 24, 2005
I wouldn’t take it to the dealer for that repair. Find an independent shop or buy the tools you need. They aren’t that expensive and it isn’t that difficult. You can even remove the hub and take it to a shop to remove the old bearing and press the new one in.
Posts: 3255 | Location: MD | Registered: March 23, 2003
I recently inherited a neglected 2003 Silverado and was hearing a dry metallic noise and was thinking maybe wheel bearing as they evidently go bad often in these. I could make it go away swerving left and get worse swerving right. I'm away from home and have no tools but noticed one rotor had scratches, mechanic confirmed a dragging rear brake.
Posts: 2621 | Location: Iowa by way of Missouri | Registered: July 18, 2002