HooliganActual
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Robert
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2020
- Threads
- 9
- Messages
- 1,410
- Reaction score
- 3,601
- Location
- 10 miles from the Sun
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Gladiator Rubicon
- Occupation
- Retired
I absolutely agree. My hypothesizing is that IF the tire shops are saying they see this AND actually replicated for @kevman65 (which in my head says they probably really do see it a lot because they knew how to replicate it), then Occam's Razor makes me believe that there is something to it...up to a point. Maybe there were a batch of poorly made clamps or rods/rod ends. Me personally I look at those clamps and think "that is just not a precision made component", but who knows.If the threads in the receiver and the threads on the shaft match, and are properly sized, once clamped, you will bend something before the threads give. But if it wasn't clamped tight enough and just once or twice was allowed to jump, it's going to round things and reduce the engagement.
If that thing is made right, and has no damage, and the clamp is properly fitting and torqued to specs (instead of the good enough most apply) you'd have a heck of a time shoving one threaded part into another.
Now if I were to have a dog in the fight, I'd be more inclined to think that it's something up on the column to steering box (coupling) that might be slipping. My 2016 JKUR has all Steer Smarts steering gear and my steering wheel moved after a hard day of wheeling, but I found a "not as tight as I would have thought it should be" bolt on a coupling. Tightened that and my steering wheel hasn't kicked off again. Now going back to the tire shop's replication scenario, maybe the "loud POP" was actually coming from the steering shaft. But I won't fall on that sword because I haven't even looked at the Gladiator's steering column componentry. Maybe a clamp up there is loose allowing the slip...
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