You could even have a broken spring or two and not necessarily notice until
you pulled it apart.
On Thu, Jan 24, 2013 at 9:32 PM, Max Dillon wrote:
> Also bushing at the bottom of the carrier could cause your problem.
> --
> Max Dillon
> Charleston SC
> '95 E300, '87 300TD, '73 Balboa 20
>
> Max
Also bushing at the bottom of the carrier could cause your problem.
--
Max Dillon
Charleston SC
'95 E300, '87 300TD, '73 Balboa 20
Max Dillon wrote:
>Control arm has an inner bushing which is a real pain to change.
>
>When all is right with the suspension, rear wheels will wear first, in
>the i
I second this. If all the rear links ere replaced except the LCA,
and its bearing in the wheel carrier, then you are left with
LCA/bearing in the wheel carrier/inner bushing, spring rubber mounts,
and a slight chance the springs are sprung.
Inner bushing and outer bearing on the spring link.
Inner bushing and outer bearing on the spring link.
Peter
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g the bottom to
>shift out causing the wear.
>
>-Curt
>
>Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2013 18:22:15 -0600
>From: Max Dillon
>To: Mercedes Discussion List
>Subject: Re: [MBZ] Worn rear tires
>Message-ID: <009bd7dd-5ef0-4fc6-ba51-af3a596d3...@email.android.com>
>Content-Type
y culprits. The car drives pretty well
but does have a little something funny going on so I kind of knew this was
coming...
-Curt
Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2013 19:29:49 -0600
From: Dieselhead <126die...@gmail.com>
To: Mercedes Discussion List
Subject: Re: [MBZ] Worn rear tires
Message-ID:
Co
Did you replace the rubber pads for the springs? If they are worn out
(thin or missing) it will cause the rear end to squat, hence wear the
insides of the tires.
Could also be incorrect alignment, of course (too much toe in, I think).
Weak springs will do the same thing, but it's normal for
Subframe mounts. These are bigtime culprits on 124 and 126, so I
presume that applies to 201 also.mn
I noticed today that my '84 190D is excessively wearing the inside
edge of the rear tires.
I've had all the rear links done and the shocks are new too, all parts from Q.
I presume theres sti
the bottom to shift out causing
the wear.
-Curt
Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2013 18:22:15 -0600
From: Max Dillon
To: Mercedes Discussion List
Subject: Re: [MBZ] Worn rear tires
Message-ID: <009bd7dd-5ef0-4fc6-ba51-af3a596d3...@email.android.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Tire p
Tire pressure correct? Rotating tires on 5k mile schedule? Bottom link aka
control arm also repaired? Bushing replaced at bottom of wheel carrier (where
control arm attaches)?
If none of those, then either alignment or sub-frame bushings.
--
Max Dillon
Charleston SC
'95 E300, '87 300TD, '73
wear at all.
-Curt
Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2013 15:38:00 -0600
From: Randy Bennell
To: Mercedes Discussion List
Subject: Re: [MBZ] Worn rear tires
Message-ID: <5101a9b8.7060...@bennell.ca>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
On 24/01/2013 3:13 PM, Curt Raymond wrote:
>
On 24/01/2013 3:13 PM, Curt Raymond wrote:
I noticed today that my '84 190D is excessively wearing the inside edge of the
rear tires.
I've had all the rear links done and the shocks are new too, all parts from Q.
I presume theres still something worn in the rear, an alignment was done after
the
I noticed today that my '84 190D is excessively wearing the inside edge of the
rear tires.
I've had all the rear links done and the shocks are new too, all parts from Q.
I presume theres still something worn in the rear, an alignment was done after
the links were replaced. Looking at the car it d
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