Omega Owners Forum

Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  

News:

Search the maintenance guides for answers to 99.999% of Omega questions

Pages: [1]   Go Down

Author Topic: Tramlining  (Read 1076 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

greenman

  • Intermediate Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • greenock
  • Posts: 310
    • View Profile
Tramlining
« on: 17 July 2010, 19:34:35 »

What causes tramlining? I,ve noticed car seems to be veering with ruts in the road.
Logged

cem_devecioglu

  • Guest
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #1 on: 17 July 2010, 19:58:23 »

wide tires with higher wheel sizes..

starting from 17 and 215..
« Last Edit: 17 July 2010, 19:59:08 by cem_devecioglu »
Logged

Andy H

  • Omega Lord
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Auckland
  • Posts: 5532
    • Mazda MPV
    • View Profile
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #2 on: 17 July 2010, 20:09:58 »

Quote
wide tires with higher wheel sizes..

starting from 17 and 215..
Also
worn (or soft) wishbone bushes
soft doughnut bushes (in the rear subframe)
worn lower balljoints
wear in any of the steering linkages

As cem pointed out though wider tyres put more off centre loads on the wheels which make any shortcomings in the suspension more obvious.

My present car has 235/45-17 tyres on it and it is a nightmare in any motorway lane that has lorry ruts. I am going to fit new wishbones and doughnut bushes in the next few days & I have hopes of a big improvement :y
Logged
"Deja Moo - The feeling that you've heard this bull somewhere before."

greenman

  • Intermediate Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • greenock
  • Posts: 310
    • View Profile
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #3 on: 17 July 2010, 20:16:20 »

I,ve fitted 245 40 18,s a couple of weeks ago so that,s probably the cause. Many thanks.
Logged

Liam

  • Intermediate Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Da Ghetto, Kempston Rural, UK
  • Posts: 251
    • View Profile
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #4 on: 17 July 2010, 22:59:23 »

Not the cause, no, but as said above, amplifying/highlighting existing problems. You'd be well advised to thoroughly check suspension and steering bushes and wheel alignment. I've driven cars with thicker tyres than that that don't veer all over the place :)
Logged

feeutfo

  • Guest
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #5 on: 18 July 2010, 09:32:40 »

.....falcon tyres, ESP the 912 model, similar reports on here re pirelli p zero, avoid these.

Inspect for suspension and steering  faults.

Replace as required, including any suspension upgrades if your into that

Visit wheels in motion web site for full geometric set up

Then, and only then, fit new tyres of a top end brand such as conti, Dunlop, bridgestone, don't buy anything cheaper than kumho ku31, anything cheeper has potentially catastrophic lack of grip in the wet.

Logged

2woody

  • Omega Baron
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Northumberland
  • Posts: 2374
    • View Profile
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #6 on: 21 July 2010, 14:32:26 »

Quote
wide tires with higher wheel sizes..

starting from 17 and 215..

absolutely spot on there
Logged

bob.dent

  • Omega Lord
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Hertfordshire
  • Posts: 6781
  • Drives better than an Omega
    • Mondeo 2.0TDCI Estate
    • View Profile
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #7 on: 21 July 2010, 15:15:25 »

Quote
.....falcon tyres, ESP the 912 model, similar reports on here re pirelli p zero, avoid these.

Inspect for suspension and steering  faults.

Replace as required, including any suspension upgrades if your into that

Visit wheels in motion web site for full geometric set up

Then, and only then, fit new tyres of a top end brand such as conti, Dunlop, bridgestone, don't buy anything cheaper than kumho ku31, anything cheeper has potentially catastrophic lack of grip in the wet.


Don't you mean Falken Chris? The FK452's are definitely bad for tramlining.
Logged
I HAVE THE BODY OF AN 18 YEAR OLD.......I KEEP IT IN THE FRIDGE!

MickAP

  • Omega Knight
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • South Derbyshire
  • Posts: 1386
  • Facelift 2.5TD Estate "Chipped" not anymore
    • View Profile
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #8 on: 21 July 2010, 15:22:35 »

Quote
Quote
.....falcon tyres, ESP the 912 model, similar reports on here re pirelli p zero, avoid these.

Inspect for suspension and steering  faults.

Replace as required, including any suspension upgrades if your into that

Visit wheels in motion web site for full geometric set up

Then, and only then, fit new tyres of a top end brand such as conti, Dunlop, bridgestone, don't buy anything cheaper than kumho ku31, anything cheeper has potentially catastrophic lack of grip in the wet.


Don't you mean Falken Chris? The FK452's are definitely bad for tramlining.

I second that comment.
Had some on the front of the saloon when I had it.
Swopped them to the rear (can't remember what was on the rear, but different) and tramlining stopped  :y job done.

Mick
Logged

Kevin Wood

  • Global Moderator
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Alton, Hampshire
  • Posts: 36414
    • Jaguar XE 25t, Westfield
    • View Profile
Re: Tramlining
« Reply #9 on: 21 July 2010, 15:35:03 »

FWIW I find this gets worse with tyre wear, so now I rotate my tyres front-to-rear so the better tyres are always on the front.

That's not ideal for other reasons but as long as the rears are changed before they get dangerously lacking in grip, it works for me.

Kevin.
Logged
Tech2 services currently available. See TheBoy's price list: http://theboy.omegaowners.com/
Pages: [1]   Go Up
 

Page created in 0.024 seconds with 17 queries.