F-250 does the hipidy dipity??

Tony Montana

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The tread on the front tires have low/high spots. I brought it to dealer today and the advisor said I need to rotate tires every 3000 miles. Can anyone confirm this? Also he said I should be running 70psi in my tires but the tires say 50psi???? They are pro comp mud tires 35x12.5x17. Could something other then lack of rotation caused this?
 

DaveBen

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3000 sounds like a bit too much. I use 10,000 for rotation. 70 pounds is not too much. I run 70 psi all of the time, hauling loads or not.

Dave
 

keanoknick

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I've always been told to rotate Mud Terrain tires every 3k All terrains every 6k and highway tires every 10k.

I saw the same thing happen earlier this year, a friend had Destination M/T's on his '02 F250, and they only lasted 12k miles, and I know for a fact he never rotated them, they made the truck feel like it had a death wobble, it was terribly loud and rough, he bought new tires, wobble was gone, sound was back to the normal hum of M/T 's and he now rotates his tires every 3k and has had no further problems.
 

pete37922

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i rotate my stock tires every 30k...lol...i wanna wear them out quik...sad thing iz they arent wearin quikley...lol !!!
 

Tony Montana

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Ok so Ford tells me the company they had do the list kit is sending a steering dampner to install. Any thoughts about this???
 

violatedppl

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prob to late but I had the same thing on my jeep, new ball jounts, TRE's, and new control arm bushings. and it ending up being uneven tire wear, rotated front to back and it went away.
 

paulkeith

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Ok so Ford tells me the company they had do the list kit is sending a steering dampner to install. Any thoughts about this???

like i said, a steering damper is just a bandaid fix, nothing more. something is loose and if the steering damper fixes it it is just hiding it. when it wears out (and it will wear faster because of the problem) it will come back.


if you tires say 50psi max, do NOT! run them at 70 psi. run whatever the max pressure is, but make sure you check them hot.

cupping of the tread (which is what it sounds like you're describing) doesn't come from not rotating your tiers, it comes from a chitty alignment. like i said in my other post, get a good alignment from a shop that knows 4x4s. good balance, alignment, and inflation are the best places to start. sometimes softer sidewall tires exacerbate the problem.

Paul


edit: i dont even know how you ended up at the dealer talking to them about lift kits. They are going to have ZERO knowledge and expertise when it comes to modifying the suspension on that truck. Hell, they probably have zero knowledge and expertise about the truck itself in the first place. Go to a local 4x4 shop. This is a very common problem with lifted SFAs, and any half decent offroad place should be able to help you track it down. Factory caster specs and everything else the dealer is going to try to do just dont apply anymore. That is, unless, they are paying for the work. Then let them throw their own money at it all you want, but they probably won't fix it.

See if you can get a hold of some stock rims and tires and go drive around. See if that does it. If it goes away, you know the issue most likely lies in the balance or characteristics of the tires you've got on there.

Sometimes the output bearing on the sector shaft of the steering box takes a crap, but at 12k that is unlikely.
 
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NHKR

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If you're talking about the steering wheel wobbling, there is a TSB out on that problem. It tells Ford to check tightness on all related HW and if that fails, to REPLACE THE STEERING WHEEL. I had all of those things done and it didn't fix it. I ended up installing a ProComp twin cylinder steering stabilizer and that fixed it.
 

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