Finding the Warped Rotor

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  • KenC
    replied
    Try rebedding your pads first. I thought my rotors were warped, but it ended up being deposits.

    Look up online how to rebed the pads, it's an extensive process.

    Leave a comment:


  • NeoMishMoo
    replied
    It is probably definitely suspension seeing as how almost all the suspension components were made in west germany. The car still takes bumps and stuff like a champ but shaking seems to be in seat and in steering wheel when braking. There is slight shaking when driving, shaking is actually pretty bad when going over 75. Bavauto has bilsteins on sale now is the time, unless there is a cheaper place.

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  • dsobering47
    replied
    What? So youre saying a single worn-out outer right ball joint could cause the same vibration in the steering wheel as a warped front right brake rotor? I dont think so.

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  • DJB
    replied
    A modern ventilated rotor warped from heat? Not likely. Look elsewhere.

    I had an ATE rotor manufactured with an out-of-plane inner hat surface -- the one that touches the wheel hub.

    It took me about two years to find it, as it would wear tires out-of-round and then the vibration would move when I rotated and re-balanced the wheels.

    I finally figured it out when I heard uneven brake pad contact while casually spinning the wheel wheel doing an unrelated project. The dial caliper confirmed it, but it was the rubbing noise that provided the real diagnostic clue.

    That said, vibration only while braking is usually loose suspension components. On the e30, that's often the CAB or outer ball joint, in that order.

    A new, stiff CAB will even hide a little ball joint looseness, but you might as well replace a bad control arm because you have only about a 50% chance of the CAB remaining intact when you pull it off. (Unless you have your own press and do it as a hobby, replacing the just the off-angle ball joint will cost more in labor than just replacing the whole control arm.)

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  • jlevie
    replied
    Originally posted by dsobering47
    vibration in steering wheel only when you brake = front rotors

    vibration in your seat only when you brake = rear rotors

    drive about 15 mph and tap the brakes...if the front end "clunks" then your CAB's are worn out....also inspect your ball joints, but you'd feel that more often than just braking.
    Close, but...

    Vibration that you feel in the steering wheel is from the front wheels/suspension.

    Vibration that you feel in the seat is from the rear wheels/suspension.

    Vibration that you feel in the brake pedal is from the front or rear brakes.

    Leave a comment:


  • dsobering47
    replied
    vibration in steering wheel only when you brake = front rotors

    vibration in your seat only when you brake = rear rotors

    drive about 15 mph and tap the brakes...if the front end "clunks" then your CAB's are worn out....also inspect your ball joints, but you'd feel that more often than just braking.

    Leave a comment:


  • NeoMishMoo
    replied
    wow yeah I think most of the suspension parts were made in west germany back when there was a west germany, so I'm guessing I probably ought to replace most of it eh? I couldn't think of a better way to spend my tax returns.

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  • StereoInstaller1
    replied
    You can do new urethane CABs in about an hour for under $100

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  • jlevie
    replied
    You can do the diagnostics yourself. Get the front end up in the air and use a pry bar to pry on each of the control arm ball joints. Then use a large (24") pair of channel locks to squeeze each all joint. And motion in the ball joints is cause for replacement of the control arms. Examine the control arm bushings for cracks or tears and replace if present.

    Grab each wheel at the the 12 & 6 o'clock position and check for motion. Do the same at the 9 & 3 o'clock positions. If the control arm ball joints aren't shot, motion along the vertical axis will be wheel bearings and motion along the horizontal axis will be tie rods.

    Shocks are as important as the rest of the suspension components. OE shocks are good for no more than 60k. Bilsteins, about 100k. Koni SA shocks are good for a really long time if you start with them set for 1 to 1-1/2 turns from full soft and adjust them for increased rebound as they wear. If the shocks have enough mileage to be worn, just replace them and the upper strut bearings.

    Leave a comment:


  • NeoMishMoo
    replied
    Pads are fine, rotors look fine, everything is stock, I'm pretty sure I replaced the wheel bearings about 5 years ago. Worn suspension is very likely, as I recently replaced a few parts and noticed that everything looked as if it should be replaced.

    I've got junk parts so I'd like to use those first, maybe it would be best to just pay a mechanic a couple hundred dollars to have complete diagnostics done so that I know where to start.

    Leave a comment:


  • AndrewBird
    replied
    Rent a dial indicator with a magnetic or clamp style base from the auto parts store. You can use this to measure the runout of each rotor and see which is warped. See here:

    http://www.clubcivic.com/board/showthread.php?t=41467

    Having them turned might not be enough to remove the warp, and as cheap as new Brembo blanks are, I would just go new.

    Leave a comment:


  • E30Nova
    replied
    Have you pulled the wheels to see the rotors? I have the same problem and my rotors are hot spotted to hell. That's more likely than actually warping rotors.

    Matt

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  • jlevie
    replied
    While it is possible to have a warped brake rotor, that is extremely unlikely to be your problem. Uneven pad deposits on the rotors, worn suspension, worn wheel bearings, bad tires, or bent wheels are the more likely causes.

    Leave a comment:


  • 619E30
    replied
    Jack up the car and get someone to brake softly and turn each wheel by hand and see which one isn't braking smooth enough

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  • StereoInstaller1
    replied
    What control arm bushings you got?

    Leave a comment:

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