I recently bought a 2004 Sebring with 30,000 miles on it. I just
noticed that the steering wheel seems to viberate with the engine at
idle. It's not violent, but you can still feel it. The engine stays at
between 750 to 1000 RPM at idle when first started, but drops to
between 500 to 750 after warming up a bit. The viberation gets more
noticable as the idle speed drops. After driving for a while, the idle
speed also sometimes fluctuate a bit at idle, just a little, but still
noticable, as if the engine can't find the best idle speed or
something. Anybody else has the same problem? Should I be concerned
about this?
p.s. With my old plymouth acclaim, I could turn my keys several times
and got the computer fault codes from the flashing engine light. Is
there a similar trick with 2004 Sebrings?
Many thanks.
maxpower - 13 Jul 2006 00:29 GMT
> I recently bought a 2004 Sebring with 30,000 miles on it. I just
> noticed that the steering wheel seems to viberate with the engine at
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>
> Many thanks.
There is a computer reflash out for a problem you are experiencing. You
would have to take it in to the dealer and have then check for any engine
controller updates on this vehicle.
Glenn Beasley
Chrysler tech
FLY135 - 13 Jul 2006 20:44 GMT
> I recently bought a 2004 Sebring with 30,000 miles on it. I just
> noticed that the steering wheel seems to viberate with the engine at
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>
> Many thanks.
Two things come to mind....
1) Bad plug, missing on 1 or more cylinders.
2) Broken motor mount.
Cracked or broken vacuum would probably cause the idle to be more
erratic or engine to die at idle, but that's another consideration.
BTW, I had a Sable that had exactly the same problem and it was a bad
plug.