B
billionaiire
Guest
Now here is a tricky one. The car drove fine a couple of days ago. Since then, it was standing in the snow until I took it out again.
I noticed that the car was vibrating at speeds of 45-50 mph. I somehow brought it back and kicked the rear bumper. Heaps of dried ice blocks fell down.
My question now is - would this cause the car to vibrate? Obviously there is this ice near the tires that might create an imbalance?
It increased with engine speed. I did wait until the car got warm (no cold start driving) while I was scrapping the snow off.
Also, I don't think ice is stuck ON the wheels. I probably will drive to check it again after it eats a little sunshine or may be splash a few buckets of hot water on the tire areas.
I noticed that the car was vibrating at speeds of 45-50 mph. I somehow brought it back and kicked the rear bumper. Heaps of dried ice blocks fell down.
My question now is - would this cause the car to vibrate? Obviously there is this ice near the tires that might create an imbalance?
It increased with engine speed. I did wait until the car got warm (no cold start driving) while I was scrapping the snow off.
Also, I don't think ice is stuck ON the wheels. I probably will drive to check it again after it eats a little sunshine or may be splash a few buckets of hot water on the tire areas.