When did you get the poly mounts?
Help diagnosing driveshaft vibration
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Gotcha. Yeah, I bet you're just feeling more vibration with the new driveshaft.
The rubber isolator would be on the shift lever itself, not the DSSR linkage. The photo I posted is looking up the skirt of a shift lever to show how the lower section that goes into the shifter cup is isolated from the top part your hand holds via rubber. I can't remember if the stock e30 shifter lever is designed like that or not.
That's the part I'm hung up on. One would think that a new driveshaft that's been balanced, new u-joints, new CSB, new guibo would have less vibration.
The true test I guess is installing the old driveshaft and it's guibo (was still good) for a comparison.Comment
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I still stand on getting rid of those trans mounts and getting a set of rouge engineering if you want something stiff stiff but compliant.
I had a car that seemed to vibrate more in 5th. Maybe gearbox?Comment
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I'm not seeing a set of trans mounts from Rouge Engineering for E30's ??
I have the common getrag rattle, so maybe that's the source of the vibration?
The trans output is pretty solid, I tried to move the driveshaft up and down near the gumbo and there was no play.
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I had something similar happen with my DS, but it would vibrate when decelerating. I found out it was a combination of my trans mounts (80a thru bolt) being compressed and the rear subframe sagging on the Garagistic 80a mounts. This cause the diff pinion angle and trans angle to be out of alignment by 3-4*. The U-joints on the DS accelerate and decelerate as they spin and the greater the operation angle the greater the angular acceleration. I think the trans and diff angle need to be at equal but opposite angles (-1* and +1*) to cancel these vibrations out.
When youre at speed does the vibration change when you accelerate vs decelerate?Comment
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I had something similar happen with my DS, but it would vibrate when decelerating. I found out it was a combination of my trans mounts (80a thru bolt) being compressed and the rear subframe sagging on the Garagistic 80a mounts. This cause the diff pinion angle and trans angle to be out of alignment by 3-4*. The U-joints on the DS accelerate and decelerate as they spin and the greater the operation angle the greater the angular acceleration. I think the trans and diff angle need to be at equal but opposite angles (-1* and +1*) to cancel these vibrations out.
When youre at speed does the vibration change when you accelerate vs decelerate?
The vibration is more pronounced when I accelerate. When i let off the gas, the vibration is noticeably less.
I'll see about getting a digital angle measurement tool.
I have new trans mounts on order. My rear subframe mounts (Garagistic 80A) are only 2 years old, I hope I don't have to replace those!
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Thanks, I'll check on those. I have new trans mounts on order. I'll double check my engine mount bolts to make sure they're secure. I re-torqued my trans mount bolts recently with no change.
Will be checking alignment to the best of my ability.
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What are you running for engine mounts? Could the CSB be backwards?
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I believe mine would vibrate bad under decel, but go away when i pressed the clutch or accelerated. Here is a picture of my subframe bushing when they failed. the 2nd pic is in the car and the room on top of the subframe/bushing.
The vibration is more pronounced when I accelerate. When i let off the gas, the vibration is noticeably less.
I'll see about getting a digital angle measurement tool.
I have new trans mounts on order. My rear subframe mounts (Garagistic 80A) are only 2 years old, I hope I don't have to replace those!
Also, these were their raised subframe bushings and the diff was properly spaced downComment


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