Samsonlabs
Member
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2015
- Posts
- 76
- Reaction score
- 32
- Ram Year
- 2014 Express Black
- Engine
- 5.7 Hemi
History:
2014 Ram 1500....34k miles on 3rd set of tires. Truck has never been wrecked or even slid off the road or into a curb.
1st set were oem Wranglers, got about 20k out of them.
2nd set were General Grabber 2s - after 1500 miles noticed odd steering and suspension problems went back to where I got them - tread had one tire at 15 mm one tire at 16 mm one at 12 mm and one at 12/13/15 mm depending where you checked, other 3 were consistent. Running 40 to 42 lbs air. Replaced under warranty.
3rd set are KO2s and have about 10k so far on them. 2 tires are sloughed off on outside edge and about wore out, (front) the other 2 have good tread but are cupped on edges. (rear) Truck gets squirrelly and vibrates over 80 mph and has over last 2 sets of tires.
Always rotated tires every oil change (5k)
OK I had them go over alignment same place I bought tires from. He put it on alignment and said there's a problem with right rear wheel. its out .84 normal is -.4 to .6. This guy says my axle tube is bent more than likely from the dealer having been dogged down too tightly on a rail car or car hauler. He is using a laser alignment device with the reflectors on every wheel. Cant align front because rear is out so bad. Starts talking whole new rear end which is going to cost about 5k in parts and labor or 3.6k if I by an entire unit and just swap them out.
This week I go to 2 other reputable alignment places. 1st one has laser unit. Says toe and camber or so bad its no wonder my tires are eat up. I ask about rear, they dont even want to talk about rear because its a straight axle...no adjustment so it is what it is. So I press them and the top alignment dude comes over and says yea your right rear wheel is out -1.1. Again no need to align because the rear is out. Admit they have seen cars brand new with bent axle housing from the dealer from being dogged too tight. They dont charge me a penny
2nd guy has 40 years in the alignment biz...does not use laser unit uses a manual level and alignment calipers. Says rear wheels are level as can be, one wheel is straight up 0° the other is a little into the negative. About as perfect as it gets. Does the front end and says good grief bad align I can fix this truck in 20 min. Says good luck getting a good alignment using a laser. I say fix it and he does. Says most of my vibration is a balance issue. Charged 71 bux. Truck runs true as can be with the tires being in the state they are in. Took it to almost 100 mph and got a bit of vibration but not squirrelly. Normal driving is pretty smooth now.
Questions: are laser level alignment units not as accurate as they are touted to be? How can laser units tell that one tire is bent in at the top but manual levels say its perfect? Should I put my faith in the laser from 2 places or believe a guy with 40 years experience who oversaw/ helped a guy with 23 yrs experience) I know exactly **** about alignments. Anyone got any insight please?
2014 Ram 1500....34k miles on 3rd set of tires. Truck has never been wrecked or even slid off the road or into a curb.
1st set were oem Wranglers, got about 20k out of them.
2nd set were General Grabber 2s - after 1500 miles noticed odd steering and suspension problems went back to where I got them - tread had one tire at 15 mm one tire at 16 mm one at 12 mm and one at 12/13/15 mm depending where you checked, other 3 were consistent. Running 40 to 42 lbs air. Replaced under warranty.
3rd set are KO2s and have about 10k so far on them. 2 tires are sloughed off on outside edge and about wore out, (front) the other 2 have good tread but are cupped on edges. (rear) Truck gets squirrelly and vibrates over 80 mph and has over last 2 sets of tires.
Always rotated tires every oil change (5k)
OK I had them go over alignment same place I bought tires from. He put it on alignment and said there's a problem with right rear wheel. its out .84 normal is -.4 to .6. This guy says my axle tube is bent more than likely from the dealer having been dogged down too tightly on a rail car or car hauler. He is using a laser alignment device with the reflectors on every wheel. Cant align front because rear is out so bad. Starts talking whole new rear end which is going to cost about 5k in parts and labor or 3.6k if I by an entire unit and just swap them out.
This week I go to 2 other reputable alignment places. 1st one has laser unit. Says toe and camber or so bad its no wonder my tires are eat up. I ask about rear, they dont even want to talk about rear because its a straight axle...no adjustment so it is what it is. So I press them and the top alignment dude comes over and says yea your right rear wheel is out -1.1. Again no need to align because the rear is out. Admit they have seen cars brand new with bent axle housing from the dealer from being dogged too tight. They dont charge me a penny
2nd guy has 40 years in the alignment biz...does not use laser unit uses a manual level and alignment calipers. Says rear wheels are level as can be, one wheel is straight up 0° the other is a little into the negative. About as perfect as it gets. Does the front end and says good grief bad align I can fix this truck in 20 min. Says good luck getting a good alignment using a laser. I say fix it and he does. Says most of my vibration is a balance issue. Charged 71 bux. Truck runs true as can be with the tires being in the state they are in. Took it to almost 100 mph and got a bit of vibration but not squirrelly. Normal driving is pretty smooth now.
Questions: are laser level alignment units not as accurate as they are touted to be? How can laser units tell that one tire is bent in at the top but manual levels say its perfect? Should I put my faith in the laser from 2 places or believe a guy with 40 years experience who oversaw/ helped a guy with 23 yrs experience) I know exactly **** about alignments. Anyone got any insight please?
