Enough of this, and some cull will try to make the things the next Corvair...
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/video?id=8547355
Death Wobble
Moderator: TJDave
- Grumpy
- Peak Putters' Land-Use Coordinator

- Posts: 6049
- Joined: Wed Mar 14, 2007 8:38 am
- Location: Kennewick, WA
Death Wobble
Dave
Have Scout, will wheel...Someday...Maybe
Quote:
Originally Posted by Oregon80
-By driving a Scout, you my friend have recycled, which is more than those pansy Prius owners can say.
-I love driving a piece of history that was nearly lost.
Have Scout, will wheel...Someday...Maybe
Quote:
Originally Posted by Oregon80
-By driving a Scout, you my friend have recycled, which is more than those pansy Prius owners can say.
-I love driving a piece of history that was nearly lost.
- commando14
- Peak Putters Member

- Posts: 1224
- Joined: Sun Mar 11, 2007 3:37 pm
- Location: Kennewick, WA
Interesting video clip... For the record, I don't see any true death wobble in any of those vehicles shown, but the shimmy they all exhibit is in fact a common problem. True death wobble will jerk the wheel out of your hand and have you changing lanes, not just make you spill your latte' or pull your cell phone away from your ear...
Sadly, this is a legit issue that affects bone stock vehicles, and while I'm not one to advocate someone else paying to fix my problem, there is some culpability here on the part of the OEM.
Sadly, this is a legit issue that affects bone stock vehicles, and while I'm not one to advocate someone else paying to fix my problem, there is some culpability here on the part of the OEM.
Yep, I've wheeled one of those, too...


ive actually experienced this before in my dads 2006 wrangler TJ, but after tinkering around with the whole front end i linked the problem to his shitty les schwab tires and rims, after sending it back to les schwab to get the rims and tired reballanced it stopped the problem for a few months. he takes it back in regularly to get them ballenced untill he can afford to get new rims and tires.
DefiantSD wrote:ive actually experienced this before in my dads 2006 wrangler TJ, but after tinkering around with the whole front end i linked the problem to his shitty les schwab tires and rims....
My sister's TJ suffered from the same thing. every time she hit a man-hole cover, it got scarey. Initially I cured it by weighting down the back end of the Jeep with a grocery-getter and firewood. She found a better fix by getting rid of the Les Schawab tires and putting on a set of Coopers ATs.
I don't Text (at least not very well), I eat Blackberrys, and I only Twitter after sex...
New adjustable control arms fixed my Jeeps caster angle which in turn fixed my wobble in the front end. Turns out the bushing in the front stock control arms were worn too. This was a well-known problem even on the stock TJ's. My TJ never did it stock, just self inflicted with the lift and stock length arms.
I am surprised its happening on JK's as well as I would think they would have gone with beefier track bars and links to the front end and looked at their caster angle to address it.
That being said these people should get someone more competent to look at their jeeps than the dealer or better yet just sell me one of their 4 door JK's for like 5 grand.
I am surprised its happening on JK's as well as I would think they would have gone with beefier track bars and links to the front end and looked at their caster angle to address it.
That being said these people should get someone more competent to look at their jeeps than the dealer or better yet just sell me one of their 4 door JK's for like 5 grand.
2004 TJ Wrangler X (Rubiclone)
2.5" OME Lift, 1.25 in Body Lift, Flat Fender Flares
35x12.50x15 Maxxis Razor MTs
D30 ARB 4.56s Rear JKD44 w/ 8.8 disk brakes Ford 9" goodies, 4.56 and ARB.
2.5" OME Lift, 1.25 in Body Lift, Flat Fender Flares
35x12.50x15 Maxxis Razor MTs
D30 ARB 4.56s Rear JKD44 w/ 8.8 disk brakes Ford 9" goodies, 4.56 and ARB.
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SquirrelCrusher
- Posts: 450
- Joined: Mon Dec 27, 2010 10:56 pm
- Location: Dayton, Wa
I like how Jeep is the only company thrown under the bus on this issue.
'94 Bronco - Buckstop bumper w/ 12k winch
To many atvs and dirt bikes
For Sale '96 F-250 Powerstroke - 4in lift, 35's, Dana 60 Front end, Tuner
Sold '96 Jeep Cherokee - 4in lift, 35s, Dual Spartans, 4.88s
Sold '80 Camaro Z/28 - T-Tops, auto, 350
To many atvs and dirt bikes
For Sale '96 F-250 Powerstroke - 4in lift, 35's, Dana 60 Front end, Tuner
Sold '96 Jeep Cherokee - 4in lift, 35s, Dual Spartans, 4.88s
Sold '80 Camaro Z/28 - T-Tops, auto, 350
- White trash
- Posts: 1763
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 9:38 pm
- Location: El Pasco
SquirrelCrusher wrote:I like how Jeep is the only company thrown under the bus on this issue.
It's not the only company that has this issue but it is one of the few that do and in far greater percentage. When you have bad geometry mixed with big soft bushings attached to weak flexible sheetmetal links it happens.
I've had wicked wobble on my yota due to worn bushings mixed with bad geometry and my ferd has it now due to worn bushings and 37's.
White trash wrote:SquirrelCrusher wrote:I like how Jeep is the only company thrown under the bus on this issue.
It's not the only company that has this issue but it is one of the few that do and in far greater percentage. When you have bad geometry mixed with big soft bushings attached to weak flexible sheetmetal links it happens.
I've had wicked wobble on my yota due to worn bushings mixed with bad geometry and my ferd has it now due to worn bushings and 37's.
Trashy totally hit the nail on the head, there. But I guess that is what makes the Jeeps work and ride so well off-road even when bone stock.
Paul
'84 XJ, '19JL
'84 XJ, '19JL
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