Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
HomeAnnouncements
Discussion Groups
By Brand
BMWChevroletDodgeFordGMHondaLexusMercedes-BenzNissanPeugeotToyotaVolkswagenOther Brands
By Topic
4x4 CarsRVsDrivingMaintenance & RepairCar AudioCollectible Cars
Country Specific
Australian ForumsUK Forums
ArticlesAuto InsuranceBuyingCars & TechnologyMaintenanceMiscellaneousSafety
DMV Resources
Related Topics
MotorcyclesBoatsMore Topics ...

Car Forum / BMW Cars / August 2005

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

E46 Steering Wheel Shimmy

Thread view: 
Enable EMail Alerts  Start New Thread
Thread rating: 
Tom - 19 Aug 2005 17:25 GMT
My E46 (02 330xi) has a shimmy in the steering wheel.   It is most
noticable after I heat up the rotors.  And if I heat them up a BUNCH,
the shimmy is VERY noticable, almost to the point of wobble.  After a
couple of 80 mph down to 20 mph braking sessions (and yes, I checked my
mirrors), the rotors are almost smoking.

My guess is that I have warped rotors and they need to be replaced.  I
have drilled Zimmerman rotors on the car and they're a little over a
year old so I didn't expect them to warp so soon (or at all, for that
matter, but hey, stuff happens).

Any ideas of what could cause the shimmy problem besides warped rotors?

Does something else heat up after some serious braking that would cause
the shimmy?  Something besides rotors?

Hopefully it turns out to be some type of $5 bushing or something cheap,
but I bet I'm buying new rotors.

Thanks for any advice.

Tom
Malt_Hound - 21 Aug 2005 17:59 GMT
> My E46 (02 330xi) has a shimmy in the steering wheel.   It is most
> noticable after I heat up the rotors.  And if I heat them up a BUNCH,
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> year old so I didn't expect them to warp so soon (or at all, for that
> matter, but hey, stuff happens).

Definitely the rotors.  Skip the fancy cross-drilling next time and you
will be much more satisfied, plus they are less expensive.  Zimmermans
are OK, but the cross drilled ones do have a tendency to warp.

--
-Fred W
Tom - 22 Aug 2005 09:55 GMT
>> My E46 (02 330xi) has a shimmy in the steering wheel.   It is most
>> noticable after I heat up the rotors.  And if I heat them up a BUNCH,
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> will be much more satisfied, plus they are less expensive.  Zimmermans
> are OK, but the cross drilled ones do have a tendency to warp.

I swapped out my front rotors yesterday.....problem gone.  It was the
rotors, nothing else.
joe_tide - 22 Aug 2005 11:42 GMT
Hopefully you used a torque wrench when tightening the wheel bolts. Too
tight bolts can also warp the rotors over time.

>>> My E46 (02 330xi) has a shimmy in the steering wheel.   It is most
>>> noticable after I heat up the rotors.  And if I heat them up a BUNCH,
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
> I swapped out my front rotors yesterday.....problem gone.  It was the
> rotors, nothing else.
Malt_Hound - 22 Aug 2005 13:06 GMT
> Hopefully you used a torque wrench when tightening the wheel bolts. Too
> tight bolts can also warp the rotors over time.

Good advice, about the torque wrench. But I must admit that I have been
pondering this oft quoted pice of advice.  Why should the rotors warp if
the wheel bolts are too tight?

I understand the theory of it being uneven cooling causing the warpage,
but why would that occur just because the bolts are too tight?  Unevenly
tightened bolts could certainly have this effect, hence the need for the
torque wrench.  But suppose I evenly tightened all of my bolts to 120
ft.lbs instead of the specified ~85?  Other than being a bitch to get
them off by hand, or possibly harming the threads or seats in the alloy
wheels, how would overtightening cause problems with the rotors?

I know I'm being picky here, just pointing out a possible urban brake
legend that pops up all the time.

--
-Fred W
joe_tide - 22 Aug 2005 17:54 GMT
Well...BMW recommends (I think, I would have to check) 87.5 lbs/ft of
torque. I have to agree that tightening over that spec. is probably not
going to do any real harm assuming they aren't too awful tight (like 120 lbs
;-) , but tightening them by hand with all five being equal is unlikely.

I agree that consistency is what you are after. To be consistent you need a
torque wrench so you might as well do it to spec if you are going to go to
that trouble.

>> Hopefully you used a torque wrench when tightening the wheel bolts. Too
>> tight bolts can also warp the rotors over time.
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> --
> -Fred W
 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2008 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.