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Tegger
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
>Honda-branded parts are the very best you can get, hands down.
>They can, however, be improperly installed.
>
>Bearing noise comes and goes depending on steering input.
>
>Under what /precise/ conditions does the noise occur and go away?
The noise is pretty much constant, and goes up in volume as I
accelerate. It does not seem to change much with stearing input. I got
to do a lot of hightway driving over the weekend, and at those speeds,
it sounds like a truck tire. That is the exact same sound as when the
bearings went bad the last time. When this happened three years ago, I
though I was having a tire problem until they told me it was the
bearings. So, of course, I'm making an assumption...

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"What, me worry?" - Alfred E. Neuman
Tegger - 17 Feb 2009 21:42 GMT
Venture Rider <dontbother@bogus.dom> wrote in news:009f62df$0$15846$c3e8da3
@news.astraweb.com:
>>Honda-branded parts are the very best you can get, hands down.
>>They can, however, be improperly installed.
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> though I was having a tire problem until they told me it was the
> bearings. So, of course, I'm making an assumption...
At this point I suspect tires.
The correct step to take now is to swap the tires left-for-right or front-
for-rear and see if the noise moves.

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Tegger
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
Venture Rider - 18 Feb 2009 21:46 GMT
>>Honda-branded parts are the very best you can get, hands down.
>>They can, however, be improperly installed.
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>though I was having a tire problem until they told me it was the
>bearings. So, of course, I'm making an assumption...
It's been confirmed by an independant garage: The front-left bearing
is making that noise. The one that was replaced by the Acura
dealership only 32,000km ago. What did the dealership say? It normal,
if you hit a bump or something.

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"What, me worry?" - Alfred E. Neuman
dan - 18 Feb 2009 23:35 GMT
I replaced a ball joint on my old Accord with one purchased at a parts
store. They have a shop in the back that pressed it in for me.
Afterwards, the steering was just not right. It took me a while to get
up the courage to take the knuckle back off and ask for replacement. I
suggested it may have been installed badly, and was told that they can
just be bad in the box. Who knows. The second one was great. At least
somebody else has to do the work replacing it for you.
dan
> It's been confirmed by an independant garage: The front-left bearing
> is making that noise. The one that was replaced by the Acura
> dealership only 32,000km ago. What did the dealership say? It normal,
> if you hit a bump or something.
Tegger - 19 Feb 2009 00:09 GMT
Venture Rider <dontbother@bogus.dom> wrote in news:00a144b9$0$27906$c3e8da3
@news.astraweb.com:
>>>Honda-branded parts are the very best you can get, hands down.
>>>They can, however, be improperly installed.
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
> dealership only 32,000km ago. What did the dealership say? It normal,
> if you hit a bump or something.
It's NOT "normal".
It takes a specific assembly sequence and considerable force to install a
front wheel bearing. Do it wrong and you wreck the bearing.
I'll bet this is due to a botched replacement. You're not getting the new
bearing installed at the same place as the old, are you?

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Tegger
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
ACAR - 20 Feb 2009 03:24 GMT
snip
> I'll bet this is due to a botched replacement. You're not getting the new
> bearing installed at the same place as the old, are you?
>
> --
> Tegger
Yeah, I agree with the Tegger. You need to take the car to another
dealer. Let them know about the prior work. Most likely the idiots
don't know how to do the work properly but there's a chance that
there's some other problem lurking. In any event, it's time for a new
set of eyes. No other dealer? Have the dealer's service manager call
the district manager while you are present to explain the need for
repeated repair.
Good luck.
Re. Honda replacement parts: my Integra needed wheel bearnings on a
routine basis; about every 70K miles or so. It was the only car I've
ever owned needing that work repeatedly. So either the parts or the
design was marginal.
Venture Rider - 20 Feb 2009 11:35 GMT
>It's NOT "normal".
>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>I'll bet this is due to a botched replacement. You're not getting the new
>bearing installed at the same place as the old, are you?
No. I've pretty much had it with my dealership.

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"What, me worry?" - Alfred E. Neuman