Hi all,
Recently I have had my car stored in a covered carpark over Dec + Jan
months in Australia. Had a friend who started up the engines over the
1st month only. When I started driving it, it felt like I had to
depress the brakes pedal quite some way before the car starts to slow
down/comes to a halt. The mechanic said it was due to gung/rust/debris
on the brake disc and would get better on its own as I keep driving
it. Today I discovered a new noise while I was driving. (Auto
transmission) While on the roads, it suddenly became apparent as a
loud noise accompanied acceleration. I don't know if it should be
described as a grinding noise but when I filled up the petrol tank the
noise seemed to become softer though did not disappear completely. The
noise seemed to sound from the back and I thought it rattled the right
side abit. More acceleration, more noise.
What's going on? Is this something I should be worried about? Or just
because of the long period of storage this 11 yr old car is working
up?
Thanks for any help!
Cheers,
J
.._.. - 03 Feb 2009 16:48 GMT
Check the heat shields on the exhaust system. They are notorious for
breaking spot welds and making a "running fan blade hitting metal pot" sound
at certain frequencies and power levels on the engine. So it might not be
transimission at all.
Note, if you are feeling a deep powerful vibration, it probably is the
transmission. But if it's a sound you hear coming from UNDER the car,
rather than THROUGH the car it's an exhaust issue.
> Hi all,
>
[quoted text clipped - 20 lines]
> Cheers,
> J
johninky - 03 Feb 2009 17:28 GMT
Two months storage will have no affect (or is it effect?) on a car.
Braking problem could be worn pads and/or low on fluid. Grinding
noise in the rear is often a failing wheel bearing.
johninky - 03 Feb 2009 17:30 GMT
Forgot to also mention a worn master brake cylinder.
j - 04 Feb 2009 05:09 GMT
Thanks for your help .._.. and johninky!