2 days ago my 2200 mile '06 started making a new noise I need to figure out asap - booked for local track day this Friday, then Rally in 2 weeks.
The noise is rotational and wheel speed dependent, not rpm. Easiest to hear around 45 - 55 mph. The tone of the whining/whirring noise seems similar to tire noise, but there is zero change in the noise when I change from one road surface type to another. Tires are new Bridgestones, this noise wasn't there for the first 600 miles on the tires. So I don't think it's tires.
Hopefully a helpful clue is that I can control the noise with feathering the throttle. Meaning if I am going between 45- 55 mph, if I give a trace of throttle the noise gets louder, then if I coast it quiets til I touch the throttle again. If I stay in throttle or stay in coast, it is less apparent then just barely going back and forth between the two. Wiggling the steering side to side doesn't seem to make much difference.
From inside the car, very hard to state directionality. I just bought a Go Pro to help trouble shoot. I started placing it inside the front susp area pointing at each hub, didn't pick up a thing. The GoPro easily picks up the sound mounted anywhere in the engine bay. Seems a trace louder pointed at the rear passenger hub as opposed to the rear driver hub. Then I mounted it on the outside fenders of the car, pointed at the rear hubs. Can just barely hear the sound on pass side, can't hear a thing from the outside on the driver side.
After highway driving for an hour, the wheel over the suspected hub doesn't feel any hotter than the other wheels.
Here is a you tube clip with the camera mounted above the pass side rear axle. between :09 and :30 I am "feathering" the throttle to make the sound go off and on:
[video]https://youtu.be/bA0H-7P12S4[/video]
Questions:
So given its road speed and not tire, what else could be possible besides wheel bearing? Is the transaxle itself the only other candidate?
If you guys think yes wheel bearing, is that as straight forward to replace as it appears in the manual? Basically says just remove the caliper, remove a few bolts that hold the hub/bearing assembly, and put on the new one. Any cautions about doing that myself at home?
Since it just started doing this, and the wheel doesn't feel hot from it yet, what are opinions about going ahead and trying to do my track day before repair, or would that be a bad idea?
Thanks a million, Beez
The noise is rotational and wheel speed dependent, not rpm. Easiest to hear around 45 - 55 mph. The tone of the whining/whirring noise seems similar to tire noise, but there is zero change in the noise when I change from one road surface type to another. Tires are new Bridgestones, this noise wasn't there for the first 600 miles on the tires. So I don't think it's tires.
Hopefully a helpful clue is that I can control the noise with feathering the throttle. Meaning if I am going between 45- 55 mph, if I give a trace of throttle the noise gets louder, then if I coast it quiets til I touch the throttle again. If I stay in throttle or stay in coast, it is less apparent then just barely going back and forth between the two. Wiggling the steering side to side doesn't seem to make much difference.
From inside the car, very hard to state directionality. I just bought a Go Pro to help trouble shoot. I started placing it inside the front susp area pointing at each hub, didn't pick up a thing. The GoPro easily picks up the sound mounted anywhere in the engine bay. Seems a trace louder pointed at the rear passenger hub as opposed to the rear driver hub. Then I mounted it on the outside fenders of the car, pointed at the rear hubs. Can just barely hear the sound on pass side, can't hear a thing from the outside on the driver side.
After highway driving for an hour, the wheel over the suspected hub doesn't feel any hotter than the other wheels.
Here is a you tube clip with the camera mounted above the pass side rear axle. between :09 and :30 I am "feathering" the throttle to make the sound go off and on:
[video]https://youtu.be/bA0H-7P12S4[/video]
Questions:
So given its road speed and not tire, what else could be possible besides wheel bearing? Is the transaxle itself the only other candidate?
If you guys think yes wheel bearing, is that as straight forward to replace as it appears in the manual? Basically says just remove the caliper, remove a few bolts that hold the hub/bearing assembly, and put on the new one. Any cautions about doing that myself at home?
Since it just started doing this, and the wheel doesn't feel hot from it yet, what are opinions about going ahead and trying to do my track day before repair, or would that be a bad idea?
Thanks a million, Beez
Last edited: