Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Picked up a new 5x10 utility trailer this weekend.  Drove it about 100 miles to pick up an ATV.  On the way, empty, it towed just fine, no issues.  Once I loaded the ATV (about 700lbs) and started to drive home, I experienced some pretty significant vibrations at highway speeds, around 60-65mph.  The vibration was variable and would get worse at times and then subside, but significant enough that I could see the front of the truck shake.  The trailer was level and I adjusted the load a bit during the ride back to see if it was due to the weight distribution to no avail.  Now I've towed other trailers with heavier loads with my truck and they were always smooth as glass, no issues.  I'm not thinking it's the truck.

 

When I got home, I raised the trailer to check the wheels and tires and found that both tires had at least 1/8 inch of run out (not round).  The rims where good.  When I spun the wheels you could visibly see the vertical wobble.  I thought it might be flat spots, but after 200 miles those should have resolved themselves.  My question is, would a 1/8 to 1/4 inch run out (both tires) cause this type of vibration?  The trailer dealer is checking with the manufacturer on next steps, but looking to see if anyone else has experience here.  Thanks

Posted

I think it would once the weight was put on the trailer, I'd take the trailer out empty again and see if you still experience the same vibration, I think that would prove it out.

Posted

Weight distribution to far to rear of trailer can make it wiggle, sometimes violently.  Worse at higher speeds. 

 

 

Posted

I would replace the Chinese tires with Goodyear Endurance tires. 

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
Quote

 My question is, would a 1/8 to 1/4 inch run out (both tires) cause this type of vibration?

 

Definitely, the trailer tires are junk as most are on cheap trailers.   Neighbor said same thing about cheap trailer he got at Tractor Supply, shakes his truck when he hauls the lawn tractor around. 

Edited by elcamino
Posted (edited)
47 minutes ago, dieselfan1 said:

I would replace the Chinese tires with Goodyear Endurance tires. 

 

That's likely my next move.  It came with the chinese Goodride tires.  I went out and checked this morning and found that both tires were overinflated by 10lbs (60lbs on a max PSI of 50).  Likely overinflated while it was stored on the dealer's lot and they didn't adjust them before I drove off with it.  I'm sure that extra 10lbs didn't help either.  Trailer dealer was "checking" with the warranty department and I'm waiting to hear back.  Trailer is a new Big Tex 30SA.

Edited by OliverDennis52

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • We want you to have full confidence in your Silverado, @ceeemcgeee. Safety is our utmost priority, and we understand your concern after this experience. We would like to provide an added layer of assistance between you and your dealer as we pursue the resolutions of your transmission concerns. When you have a moment, we would like to learn more about your experience so we may explore the best path of assistance moving forward. Please visit: https://s.chevy.com/support-request and fill out the support request form with all pertinent details. This form helps our team gather the right information and ensures your request is routed appropriately.
    • Disclosure: BlueV8 is a Supporting Vendor and sells plug-in AFM/DFM disablers.   Before you spend a dime with us — or with anyone — try the AFM disabler GM already built into your truck. It's the shifter, and it's free. ⏱ The 10-second version 🚫 Skip the M5 method if: Most of your miles are highway — M5 locks out 6th gear, so you cruise at higher RPM and burn more fuel You already know you'll forget — it only works if you do it every single drive Your lifters are already ticking — nothing that switches AFM off repairs existing damage You already run a tune or disabler — this would be doing the same job twice ✅ Worth trying if: You want AFM off today, for exactly $0 You want to test-drive V8-only life before buying anything Your driving is mostly town and short trips, where 6th gear barely matters Your truck is leased or under warranty and you won't touch the ECM — this is zero hardware, zero software 💡 The whole trick, in one paragraph Owners across GM forums keep reporting the same pattern: put the transmission in manual / range-select mode, pick M5 or lower, and AFM never activates — the truck stays in V8 the whole drive. Bump it up to M6 and V4 mode comes right back. Two of the cleaner threads on it are here and here. GM has never documented this behavior, so file it under "strong owner consensus," not gospel. The good news: it takes exactly one drive to verify on your own truck. Steps below. What "free" actually costs Effort, every drive. It's a routine, not a setting. Shift to M, tap up to 5, every time you get in. There is no set-and-forget here. 6th gear. When GM shipped trucks with AFM/DFM switched off during the 2021 chip shortage, its own estimate of the penalty was about 1 MPG — and those trucks kept every gear. In M5 you're also giving up overdrive, so expect the highway hit to be bigger than that. Patience. One Tahoe owner ran the L5 routine for two months, then got tired of it and bought a plug-in disabler — he had an extended warranty, so flashing a tune was off the table. That's not a knock on the method. That's just what month two feels like.   I put together the full instructions, limitations, and links to the original owner discussions here: https://www.bluev8.com/blogs/news/how-to-disable-afm-for-free-the-m5-method
    • Disclosure: BlueV8 is a Supporting Vendor and we sell AFM/DFM disablers. We wrote this because not every GM owner actually needs one. In some cases, regular maintenance, towing use, an existing tune, or simply using M5 makes another device unnecessary.   ⏱ The 10-second version 🚫 Skip it if… You keep the oil full and change it every ~5,000 miles. Your risk is already low. You're happy shifting into M5 every drive. That disables AFM for free. Your truck tows heavy most days. AFM barely runs under load. You already run a tune or delete kit. Done is done. It's already ticking or misfiring. You need a mechanic, not a plug-in. ✅ Worth it if… You bought it used and the oil history is a mystery. Checking the dipstick is… not your hobby. (No judgment.) You're a long-term keeper with lots of easy highway miles — exactly when AFM runs most. The V4 drone and shudder drive you nuts. You're under warranty, so a tune is off the table.   The full article includes the supporting GM bulletins and owner reports: https://www.bluev8.com/blogs/news/do-you-actually-need-an-afm-disabler
    • It`s magnetic so it`s not main or rod bearings. I would pop off a valve cover or 2 and take a good look at the rocker arms. See if you can see if any needle bearings are coming apart.
    • Hey yall.   I have a 2015 GMC Sierra 1500 5.3 2wd. I just did my own oil change (currently 132,000 miles) on the truck for the first time since I got it. It has always had routine maintenance done at the correct time. Never once had a check engine light, oil pressure light, or any light (except low fuel lol). Also never towed anything ever. It has been a daily driver for me.   I noticed the dipstick has metal shavings magnetized to the end of it. And even after wiping it and putting it back in like 12 times, it still pulls some out. The oil filter also has a good amount in it.  It has always ran perfect and still does. Never ever had a weird noise or knocking or ever ran rough. Almost too perfect lol. So this metal has really surprised me. I see some similar stories where people say this is normal wear, others say your engine is cooked. I know it’s hard to say for sure without seeing in person but just wanna see if anyone has had a similar experience at this mileage or any advice?   Thank you in advance.
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...