Dave145
Active Member
Hi everyone,
Just got the Dart out of storage for the first time in a few years. I took it to the tires replaced since they were from the 80's. Got the car back, all was well. Drives smooth enough at normal highway speeds (about 55-60 around here), until I get on the interstate. the second the car hits above 70, it develops a very bad vibration. Let off the gas and coast down to 60-65 and it's fine again. The vibration feels like it comes from rear to middle of the car.
Fast forward to now. I have now replaced the rear u joint (even though it felt fine turning by hand), pulled my tranny to have a look at the flex plate (all good no cracks at all and all bolts tight), and I greased every front end component that had a fitting on it. Someone suggested checking the brakes (4 wheel manual drums) to make sure they aren't hanging up and they are not.
I'm at a loss of what's next. Get the tires rebalanced? When I had them installed I was told by the shop they balanced kinda heavy (3+ oz offset to balance them apparently).
The car didn't do this 2 years ago when I last drove it, which is why I'm stumped.
Car is a 1976 Dodge Dart 4 door special edition with the 225 motor and 904 trans. Open rear end with 2.71 gears. If it helps.
Just got the Dart out of storage for the first time in a few years. I took it to the tires replaced since they were from the 80's. Got the car back, all was well. Drives smooth enough at normal highway speeds (about 55-60 around here), until I get on the interstate. the second the car hits above 70, it develops a very bad vibration. Let off the gas and coast down to 60-65 and it's fine again. The vibration feels like it comes from rear to middle of the car.
Fast forward to now. I have now replaced the rear u joint (even though it felt fine turning by hand), pulled my tranny to have a look at the flex plate (all good no cracks at all and all bolts tight), and I greased every front end component that had a fitting on it. Someone suggested checking the brakes (4 wheel manual drums) to make sure they aren't hanging up and they are not.
I'm at a loss of what's next. Get the tires rebalanced? When I had them installed I was told by the shop they balanced kinda heavy (3+ oz offset to balance them apparently).
The car didn't do this 2 years ago when I last drove it, which is why I'm stumped.
Car is a 1976 Dodge Dart 4 door special edition with the 225 motor and 904 trans. Open rear end with 2.71 gears. If it helps.















