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#11
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Clutch Chirp
"Chuck" > wrote in
news:uSTbf.456$Mi5.439@dukeread07: > There may be a squeak or chirp coming from the bushings in the > rear axle assembly when you upshift at high throttle settings.. > This usually will occur (if it occurs) on super and turbo charged > Miatas. Try lubing the bushings with rubber lubricant. Or ignore > it as I do. Dang, doesn't anyone read before replying? <snicker> |
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#12
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Clutch Chirp
"Dana H. Myers" > wrote in
: >>>It isn't coming the area of the clutch; it's coming from the area >>>of the rear wheels and it sounds like rubber tires squealing. > It's not the bushing. It's the tires. It was a joke. That Zzzznnnnnngggg you hear was it flying over everyone's head! <g> Subtlety doesn't work with this bunch! Somewhere there's a guy from this group still working with his super computer trying to disprove Leo's photon drag theory..... <snicker> But, personally, I think a little humor is a good thing, this is a pretty serious bunch here. |
#13
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Clutch Chirp
Joke or not, there is an issue- On my 99 it's more of a squawk, and it's not
the tires. Evidently, you can apply enough torque to make the dry rubber bushings move enough to make noise. "XS11E" > wrote in message ... > "Chuck" > wrote in > news:uSTbf.456$Mi5.439@dukeread07: > > > There may be a squeak or chirp coming from the bushings in the > > rear axle assembly when you upshift at high throttle settings.. > > This usually will occur (if it occurs) on super and turbo charged > > Miatas. Try lubing the bushings with rubber lubricant. Or ignore > > it as I do. > > Dang, doesn't anyone read before replying? <snicker> |
#14
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Clutch Chirp
Dana H. Myers wrote:
> It's not the bushing. It's the tires. It was a joke. > > ;-) > > Dana The rear tires? Does that mean that you have not done the FWD conversion yet? I talked to a miata owner the other day who did not know if his car was RWD or FWD. I'm not even sure how I answered, it all gets hazy after that. I am hoping that he was also joking, but I don't think he was. It had a hardtop on and he did at least know that it comes off. :-) Pat |
#15
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Clutch Chirp
pws wrote:
> Dana H. Myers wrote: > > >> It's not the bushing. It's the tires. It was a joke. >> >> ;-) >> >> Dana > > > The rear tires? Does that mean that you have not done the FWD conversion > yet? Despite urgings from my "street tuner" friends, no. > I talked to a miata owner the other day who did not know if his car was > RWD or FWD. I'm not even sure how I answered, it all gets hazy after > that. I am hoping that he was also joking, but I don't think he was. > > It had a hardtop on and he did at least know that it comes off. :-) Ya just gotta be cool. Everyone learns at different rates. Mention how Miatas are better for drifting, he'll get it someday. Dana |
#16
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Clutch Chirp
Dana H. Myers wrote:
> Ya just gotta be cool. Everyone learns at different rates. Mention how > Miatas are better for drifting, he'll get it someday. > > Dana Yeah, I know that not everyone is as obsessed with the car as I am, but damnit, just take a look at the trunk. What FWD car has a trunk that small? Rant mode on: This guy was young, and unless our driving schools have changed, they don't even tell you that there is a difference between FWD, RWD & AWD. They also do not teach weight transfer, counter-steering, or any of the many other things that would save lives. All I learned in that driver's education class was the rules of the road, most of which I already knew from observing others drive. They did teach a bit about watching out for emergencies, but nothing at all about what to do once that emergency occured. Rant mode off: Pat |
#17
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Driver Ed
In article >,
pws > wrote: Hoho, Pat, you're so funny. > unless our driving schools have changed, they > don't even tell you that there is a difference between FWD, RWD & AWD. Heh. When I took Driver Ed, it was not much of an issue. I mean, no high school used Citroëns, Tuckers, or Jeeps. > They also do not teach weight transfer, counter-steering, or any of the > many other things that would save lives. All I learned in that driver's > education class was the rules of the road Weight transfer: slide your fat butt over so I can get in, too. Counter steering: bench racing on a stool at the soda fountain. In the early '60s, seatbelts were still catching on in race cars. They weren't even optional in most passenger cars yet. I bought a set at Western Auto and installed them in my parents' '59 Ford, after one of my friends was partly ejected from the car he rolled before the door closed on his waist and cut him in half. That'll wake you up, yessiree. It was all most 10th graders could do to stay on the pavement; if you never crossed the centerline, you got an A. I mght have gotten as much as an hour total behind the wheel, including the oval behind the gym and parallel parking. The rest of the time was spent watching bloody movies like "Signal 30" and "Mechanized Death." Fortunately, my mom had already taught me to drive properly. I only needed the class to get the insurance discount. I recall one girl who lost it while backing up and knocked over the gas pump. They evacuated the school. She became a hero. She passed the class anyway. Somehow, despite the manifold shortcomings of my motoring education, I still haven't hurt anyone or totalled a car. -- Lanny Chambers '94C, St. Louis http://www.hummingbirds.net/alignment.html |
#18
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Driver Ed
Lanny Chambers wrote:
> Hoho, Pat, you're so funny. I try. > Somehow, despite the manifold shortcomings of my motoring education, I > still haven't hurt anyone or totalled a car. Same here, never hurt anyone and I blame the deer for the one totaled car. Anyone else in the world would have hit it in the same situation, except maybe you, Lanny the automotive Superman. ;-) I read a book by Bob Bondurant on performance driving at the age of 16 and he explained weight transfer, counter-steering, corner apex, and just about everything else. It seemed to me even at the time to be good information to teach to the students, both in class and in the car. Do you agree or not agree that more stringent driving instruction, such as they have in Germany, would result in less vehicle accidents in the United States? Pat |
#19
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Driver Ed
In article >,
pws > wrote: > Same here, never hurt anyone and I blame the deer for the one totaled > car. Anyone else in the world would have hit it in the same situation, > except maybe you, Lanny the automotive Superman. ;-) Hmph. I hit a deer once with my '68 Mustang. Definitely the deer's fault--it had almost crossed the road, and I had plenty of room to pass behind it. But then it turned around and doubled back. I'd slowed to about 20 when it flung itself under my wheels. Didn't damage my car. I'm always proud to be chosen as an agent of natural selection. :-) > Do you agree or not agree that more stringent driving instruction, such > as they have in Germany, would result in less vehicle accidents in the > United States? I used to. But now I'm not so sure I want to share the road with teenagers in bass-thumping Hondas practicing their weight transfers while talking on cellphones. Not everyone is cut out to be a race driver. After all, *someone* has to fry all those burgers. The world is a different place now. In my high school, the only kids with their own cars were taking 12th grade for the third time. Even they weren't allowed to park on the school grounds. -- Lanny Chambers '94C, St. Louis http://www.hummingbirds.net/alignment.html |
#20
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Driver Ed
Lanny Chambers wrote:
> Hmph. I hit a deer once with my '68 Mustang. Definitely the deer's > fault--it had almost crossed the road, and I had plenty of room to pass > behind it. But then it turned around and doubled back. I'd slowed to > about 20 when it flung itself under my wheels. Didn't damage my car. I'm > always proud to be chosen as an agent of natural selection. :-) I would certainly rather hit a deer at 20 mph in a 1968 Mustang than at 60 mph in a 1996 Miata. > I used to. But now I'm not so sure I want to share the road with > teenagers in bass-thumping Hondas practicing their weight transfers > while talking on cellphones. Not everyone is cut out to be a race > driver. After all, *someone* has to fry all those burgers. I never suggested teaching people to be race car drivers, just the opposite in fact. Anyone wanting to be a race car driver will learn from a far better place than driver's education. What I am talking about is at least having the teacher mention that you should not slam on the brakes in a corner, how to counter-steer properly, etc. I agree that cell phones are a problem and as much as I hate adding new laws, I think that using them while driving should be banned everywhere for both teenagers and adults. > The world is a different place now. In my high school, the only kids > with their own cars were taking 12th grade for the third time. Even they > weren't allowed to park on the school grounds. It certainly is different. I didn't park on school grounds because they could search your vehicle there at random, and my vehicle at that time was a 1982 Ford Econoline with custom interior. Parking down the street seemed wiser to me, and no, I did not go to Ridgemont High. ;-) Pat |
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