Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations Ron247 on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

LandRover Death wobble

GregLocock

Automotive
Apr 10, 2001
23,874
I am told that live front axle LRs of a certain vintage may suffer from the death wobble popularised by Jeep. Rumor has it that on the Landys this is due to to worn bearings/shafts in the steering box and that reshimming may fix it. Has anyone worked on this?
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Shimming may quiet it down simply because this adds some friction in the steer/ride mode. A higher flow rate pump can work as would a more responsive steering valve if power steering.
The fundamental problem is the tierod slope in front view. Change the height of the steer arm ball off the gear's Pitman arm to reduce the positive feedback. Many resort to an actual steering damper to change the critical damping level. This is also a patch on a systems problem. Increase the tire air pressure or go to radial tires to reduce tire Mz.
 
so this an interesting subject. as i once purchased a used 2006 jeep with very low miles.
question! is this an inherent design flaw?
is it due to the forces , vibration, excessive wear, not robust enough to prevent radical vibration.?
I had two option complete rebuild of the front end with after market components. that was stiffer, more robust. bigger diameter, or larger
components. that prevented aka death wobble.
when I purchased this vehicle I drove it to work I was going the speed limit of 65 miles per hour. I hit a small pot hole. and I experience the scary death wobble.
not a fun experience.
 
@cibachrome thanks.

When new the live front axle LandRovers were safe to drive at any feasible speed, so we know it is a wear thing, perhaps excited by poor geometry
 
On Jeep Wranglers it's usually the front axle track-bar to body attachment - either the bushing is shot, or the bolt has loosened and allowed the hole in the bracket to be ovalled out. But, loose connections anywhere in the steering or suspension arms can cause this, and you're supposed to inspect everything.
 
On Jeep Wranglers it's usually the front axle track-bar to body attachment - either the bushing is shot, or the bolt has loosened and allowed the hole in the bracket to be ovalled out. But, loose connections anywhere in the steering or suspension arms can cause this, and you're supposed to inspect everything.
So should of had a front end inspected, R and R
 

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor