Whaler27
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Alex
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2020
- Threads
- 60
- Messages
- 2,667
- Reaction score
- 5,337
- Location
- Oregon
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 JL, 2016 Jeep Grand Cherokee Altitude Ecodiesel, 2005 Mustang GT, 2018 Ford Raptor, 2018 BMW R1200GSA, 2020 Honda Monkeybikes (2), 1972 Honda CT-70, 1980 Honda CT-70,
- Occupation
- Saving the world :-)
This ^^ 100%.Improper geometry and/or loose or worn suspension components cause death wobble. Steering stabilizers fight the symptoms of those loose or worn parts and improper geometry including death wobble but they don't cause it. The problem is the geometry is worse in the JL, due to the fact that Jeep just lowered the spec for proper caster as they started making models of different heights amongst other things. No 4⁰ isn't good enough despite what they tell you. The ball joints now come with crap plastic liners and are loose when new. Cheap bushings. The list goes on. An imbalanced tire can even cause death wobble. That's a lot of stuff to replace and then keep in perfect order, but the stabilizer isn't causing the wobble.
…. and I have had three Dodge 3500 pickup trucks and at least seven Ford F-350s, all with solid front axels, none with steering stabilizers, and I have never experienced death wobble in any of them. None of these trucks had huge lifts, but all had some lift, and all ran 35“ to 37” tires. I HAVE had several thoroughly wheeled Jeeps that developed DW, but I’ll spare everybody the Yeti video repair link I posted the last 23 times we discussed DW (and proved its cure without a steering stabilizer).
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