JASinIL2006
Vice Admiral
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2012
- Messages
- 5,714
I've been servicing my wife's '13 Toyota Sienna minivan (2wd, about 115,000 miles), and I have a front end rattle that has persisted despite my having serviced a bunch of stuff that needed to be replaced. I've posted my question on a vehicle-specific forum, but they don't always have a ton of traffic, so I'm hoping some of the more experienced mechanical minds here might also be able to help.
On this minivan, I have recently replaced, on both sides of the vehicle:
The Problem: although the front end feels much tighter and vehicle handling is improved after my work, I am still getting a rattle or light clunk when going over bumps. (The rattle preceded any of my work, by the way.) The noise is not affected by speed, acceleration/deceleration, or turning. It seems to be primarily coming from the front end on the driver’s side. In addition to hearing it, I believe I can feel it a bit through the floor board.
From everything I’ve seen, it does not seem to be a wheel bearing (no grinding, no speed-dependent noise, no differences from turning right or left). Is that a reasonable conclusion, that bearings can be ruled out?
I’m not sure what else to check... since the vehicles don’t have serviceable inner tie rods, would the rack and pinion be a suspect? Any idea how to evaluate that?
I’m stumped. Any suggestions/ideas/diagnostic tests would be most welcome!
On this minivan, I have recently replaced, on both sides of the vehicle:
- lower control arms, bushing and ball joints
- struts, strut mounts and bearings
- outer tie rod ends
- sway bar links
The Problem: although the front end feels much tighter and vehicle handling is improved after my work, I am still getting a rattle or light clunk when going over bumps. (The rattle preceded any of my work, by the way.) The noise is not affected by speed, acceleration/deceleration, or turning. It seems to be primarily coming from the front end on the driver’s side. In addition to hearing it, I believe I can feel it a bit through the floor board.
From everything I’ve seen, it does not seem to be a wheel bearing (no grinding, no speed-dependent noise, no differences from turning right or left). Is that a reasonable conclusion, that bearings can be ruled out?
I’m not sure what else to check... since the vehicles don’t have serviceable inner tie rods, would the rack and pinion be a suspect? Any idea how to evaluate that?
I’m stumped. Any suggestions/ideas/diagnostic tests would be most welcome!