npgeorgeuw
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Nicholas
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2021
- Threads
- 19
- Messages
- 200
- Reaction score
- 103
- Location
- Issaquah, WA
- Vehicle(s)
- 2017 Subaru Outback 3.6R and 2017 Chevrolet Bolt
- Occupation
- Business Owner
- Thread starter
- #1
I've noticed three times in the last few weeks that the rear-end on my truck has gotten a lot less trust-worthy around turns when the pavement is wet (but not covered in water).--Way easier to put the rear end into a fish-tail and I did so at relatively low speed (35-40 mph) on curves I wouldn't normally have expected it to do so on. My truck has the 2+ inch lift (MOPAR), 35x12.5 Falken Wildpeak AT3Ws (with about 6,000 miles on them). Tires are somewhere under 35 psi, it's cooler now than when I last checked them and I'm admittedly overdue to adjust them but they haven't gone up in PSI. These are the same turns I've always had to take on my commute and I'm taking them in the same weather conditions so as far as I can tell nothing is new there, I'm also not suddenly driving like a race-car driver. It truly feels like I suddenly got 30,000 more miles put on the tires.
It's my first ever truck with a LSD but not my first rear-wheel-drive vehicle in the snow or rain but I'm just surprised at how incredibly easy it has been LATELY to fishtail my rear end. I've checked rear linkages for slop or damage and nothing is obvious. I did get a re-gear done a month or so ago. Any chance they messed up royally with the clutch pack reinstalls when they did that? Easy to mess up? I'm assuming get it on a lift or jacks and check the breaking (term?) torque on the rear to see if the LSD is still in spec? I'm not sure if it makes a difference, but each slide/fish-tail only happens with maintaining speed through the curve so some gas is still being applied.--I'm not accelerating through the curves though. Letting off the gas through the curve plants the truck. (not sure if that's just a RWD drive thing, but I can't exactly be "letting off the gas" for a road with 5 miles of curves without going 20 mph the whole time. )
I obviously don't expect it to handle like an Outback in the rain but it shouldn't obviously be handling like my heavy EV with bald front tires (my Bolt has bald front tires and this is about as bad as that on wet pavement) It's the change in handling and "feel" that has me most concerned. Aside from feeling way less planted in the rear when going around turns or road bends I haven't noticed any other stability issues on the freeway, etc. Thoughts?
It's my first ever truck with a LSD but not my first rear-wheel-drive vehicle in the snow or rain but I'm just surprised at how incredibly easy it has been LATELY to fishtail my rear end. I've checked rear linkages for slop or damage and nothing is obvious. I did get a re-gear done a month or so ago. Any chance they messed up royally with the clutch pack reinstalls when they did that? Easy to mess up? I'm assuming get it on a lift or jacks and check the breaking (term?) torque on the rear to see if the LSD is still in spec? I'm not sure if it makes a difference, but each slide/fish-tail only happens with maintaining speed through the curve so some gas is still being applied.--I'm not accelerating through the curves though. Letting off the gas through the curve plants the truck. (not sure if that's just a RWD drive thing, but I can't exactly be "letting off the gas" for a road with 5 miles of curves without going 20 mph the whole time. )
I obviously don't expect it to handle like an Outback in the rain but it shouldn't obviously be handling like my heavy EV with bald front tires (my Bolt has bald front tires and this is about as bad as that on wet pavement) It's the change in handling and "feel" that has me most concerned. Aside from feeling way less planted in the rear when going around turns or road bends I haven't noticed any other stability issues on the freeway, etc. Thoughts?
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