An elderly friend of mine has a 1999 Dodge Dakota 4X4 with about 85,000 miles on it, and I often take care of it for him. Yesterday morning he brought it by the house with the complaint that it suddenly developed a vibration in the steering.
I looked at the front wheels and it was clear that a weight was missing from the left front (the dirt outline was still there but the weight was gone). I told him to swing by a tire shop and have them rebalance all 4 wheels.
He stopped back yesterday afternoon and said that the tire shop told him that "All 4 ball joints needed replaced, and both tie rod ends need replaced." John wanted to check with me first, and just had them balance the tires. The shop told him it wasn’t safe to drive, but finally balanced his tires and he left.
Red flags immediately went off when John told me-I replaced the tie rod ends just over a year ago for him, and I didn't see any indication of ball joint issues that that time. However, I took his Dakota out for a test drive and it steers normally, there is no clunking or noises in the front end, and it handles like I'd expect a 12 year old Dakota to handle. Balancing the wheels eliminated the vibration that he originally complained about.
I then pulled the Dakota into the shop and put the front end in the air. The tire wear is even and there is no noticeable play when grabbing each tire at the top and bottom and shaking. The tie rod ends are nice and tight and still look "new" compared to the rest of the front suspension.
I then dropped the front end back to the ground and had John move the steering wheel back and forth within the free play-again, no noticeable play in the ball joints. I put a pry bar on the ball joints and any movement was negligible.
I have a hunch that the tire shop needed some extra revenue this week and thought they found it, but before I confront them, are there any other indications of bad tie rod ends/ball joints that I missed? Anything else I need to check?
I looked at the front wheels and it was clear that a weight was missing from the left front (the dirt outline was still there but the weight was gone). I told him to swing by a tire shop and have them rebalance all 4 wheels.
He stopped back yesterday afternoon and said that the tire shop told him that "All 4 ball joints needed replaced, and both tie rod ends need replaced." John wanted to check with me first, and just had them balance the tires. The shop told him it wasn’t safe to drive, but finally balanced his tires and he left.
Red flags immediately went off when John told me-I replaced the tie rod ends just over a year ago for him, and I didn't see any indication of ball joint issues that that time. However, I took his Dakota out for a test drive and it steers normally, there is no clunking or noises in the front end, and it handles like I'd expect a 12 year old Dakota to handle. Balancing the wheels eliminated the vibration that he originally complained about.
I then pulled the Dakota into the shop and put the front end in the air. The tire wear is even and there is no noticeable play when grabbing each tire at the top and bottom and shaking. The tie rod ends are nice and tight and still look "new" compared to the rest of the front suspension.
I then dropped the front end back to the ground and had John move the steering wheel back and forth within the free play-again, no noticeable play in the ball joints. I put a pry bar on the ball joints and any movement was negligible.
I have a hunch that the tire shop needed some extra revenue this week and thought they found it, but before I confront them, are there any other indications of bad tie rod ends/ball joints that I missed? Anything else I need to check?