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Front wheel hop?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by yellow wagon, Nov 10, 2010.

  1. yellow wagon
    Joined: Jun 13, 2007
    Posts: 612

    yellow wagon
    Member
    from WI

    Took my 64 out for a ride the other day and for the first time in months got the car up to 65mph. At about that speed I noticed a front end hop...feels like a wheel badly out of balance. However, I just had new valve stems put in all 4 and rebalanced. The reason for the new valve stems were because of faulty ones. I found the car twice with completely flat tires due to cheap/cracked valve stems...

    So thoughts? Bad tire? Something loose in the frontend? At slower speeds the car drives just fine.
     
  2. seb fontana
    Joined: Sep 1, 2005
    Posts: 8,907

    seb fontana
    Member
    from ct

    I would say whom ever balanced the tired this time around missed the boat..
     
  3. cwayne
    Joined: Dec 24, 2009
    Posts: 220

    cwayne
    Member

    check the shocks... weak shock will cause this at high speed with ruff road..
     
  4. yellow wagon
    Joined: Jun 13, 2007
    Posts: 612

    yellow wagon
    Member
    from WI

    Car has all new shocks, tie rods, control arm bushings, ball joints, springs. Ok I have the tires rebalanced like mentioned here first and go from there
     
  5. yellow wagon
    Joined: Jun 13, 2007
    Posts: 612

    yellow wagon
    Member
    from WI

    Radials...car gets driven almost daily in the nice months. Car had been sitting for about a week prior to this drive
     
  6. did a weight come off a drum? on my car i loosened the wheel bearing with tire off the ground. the wheel would turn, then rock, then stop, the bottom of the tire was the heavy end i put a weight at the top, turned the wheel and let go. i then added weights till the wheel wouldn't revolve on it's own. sounds crazy? it works. basically balancing the wheel, hub and drum together
     
  7. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 35,091

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    If the tire shop you go to still has an on the car spin balancer they can spin the front tires up and see real quickly if one is out of balance.

    Other things that may be the cause are:
    loosing a wheel weight an if it drove ok earlier and you didn't change anything that is my guess.
    Broken belt in one of the tires. Jack the car up and rotate the tire while looking for a lump. That usually shows up at low speeds though.
    Tread separation.
    Hubcap that is out of balance. I saw that on some early 70s Ford big cars straight from the factory.
     
  8. djmk52
    Joined: Nov 15, 2010
    Posts: 14

    djmk52
    Member
    from norfolk va

    found tires flat,hmmmm,,, could it be the belts in the tires are now shifted after driving it after balancing,, it hapened to me before,, have the balance er-checked, but this time ,take it someplace that does the on-the car balance,,, that way you balance everything that rotates
     
  9. Did they take a lot of weights to re-balance? More than before? Have them deflate the tires and re-clock them on the wheels. If you can see any small wave in the sidewall, make sure it is opposite the valve stem, then rebalance. As said above, balance on the car if possible.
     
  10. I will personally never own another Firestone tire. In late 1977 I bought a new Corvette equipped with Firestone 500 white lettered tires. At approx. 18,000 miles all 4 tires had belts shift. You could actually see the bulges in the treads. The DOT settled with Firestone and forced them to replace only tires manufactured within a certain window of time. Mine fell two months outside that window and Firestone wouldn't honor the settlement. I replaced them with Michelins and swore I would never again own a Firestone tire. Sorry, didn't mean to hijack this thread.
     
  11. Out of round tire? Jack the front end off the ground, spin it by hand and look closely from the side. I had the same symptons and that was the problem.
     
  12. That is a very distinct possibility. Quality control is not what it used to be for sure.
     
  13. Just curious, Kev. Were you able to have someone shave the tire or was it beyond hope? Some brand new tires are so hopelessly out of round they can't be saved.
     
  14. I shaved my own and it worked great but you don't want to hear that story. Call some tire shops and find out who does it, you will probably have more luck with a tire shop that does a lot of truck work.
     
  15. ROADSTER1927
    Joined: Feb 14, 2009
    Posts: 3,221

    ROADSTER1927
    Member

    Check your tire pressure and air to specs on side wall. it may be that simple. Gary
     
  16. atomickustom
    Joined: Aug 30, 2005
    Posts: 3,409

    atomickustom
    Member

    I vote for the tire, too. I've had that happen when they were old, and going completely flat might have been enough to damage one. Jack up the car and rotate the wheel with one hand on the tread. You will be able to feel it if there is a high or low spot.
     
  17. i also vote for it being a tire issue.
     

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