My apologies to Nitto Tires!
Posted: Tue Jan 20, 2015 3:43 pm
My apologies to Nitto Tires. A little less than a year ago I replaced my almost worn-out Michelin LTX M/S2's with Nitto Dura Grapplers; I loved the Michelins but money was tight at the time and the Nittos were a little over $200 cheaper for the set of four.
At first, I was satisfied with them; they rode well in wet or dry weather, albeit they did ride a lot harder than the Michelins. The last couple of months I've been feeling vibration in the steering wheel, but the wheel wasn't shaking and didn't feel like an imbalance issue and I knew the alignment was good. I figured the vibration was due to the tires now that they had a few thousand miles on them and were wearing-in.
Last week I noticed a bad, front driveshaft U-joint, but I still figured the vibration was likely due to the tires as it occured in 2WD mode and the rear U-joints appeared to be good. Based on their history of failures and 136,000 mi. on my 06 LE, I decided to replace all four sets of U-joints. The rear joint on the front shaft was completely trashed and both joints were replaced with a set of Moog severe-duty joints with grease fittings on the caps. The rear shaft joints were fine with no play and grease inside the caps, but I installed a new set of Dana-Spicer U-joints, also with grease fittings on the caps.
One thing I noticed is that when I turned the front wheels, the front driveshaft also turned, which makes me assume that the front shaft turns even when in 2WD mode rather than just in 4WD or "AUTO" mode. This would make sense since there is no 4WD hub in the front and they use a conventional wheel bearing hub assembly with a hat-style brake rotor.
After installing the new U-joints, the vibration is gone and the tires, while they still ride harder than the Michelins, ride like they did when they were new. So, for the bad-mouthing of my Nitto Tires, I hereby apologize! They're a very good tire...but I still like my old Michelins better!
At first, I was satisfied with them; they rode well in wet or dry weather, albeit they did ride a lot harder than the Michelins. The last couple of months I've been feeling vibration in the steering wheel, but the wheel wasn't shaking and didn't feel like an imbalance issue and I knew the alignment was good. I figured the vibration was due to the tires now that they had a few thousand miles on them and were wearing-in.
Last week I noticed a bad, front driveshaft U-joint, but I still figured the vibration was likely due to the tires as it occured in 2WD mode and the rear U-joints appeared to be good. Based on their history of failures and 136,000 mi. on my 06 LE, I decided to replace all four sets of U-joints. The rear joint on the front shaft was completely trashed and both joints were replaced with a set of Moog severe-duty joints with grease fittings on the caps. The rear shaft joints were fine with no play and grease inside the caps, but I installed a new set of Dana-Spicer U-joints, also with grease fittings on the caps.
One thing I noticed is that when I turned the front wheels, the front driveshaft also turned, which makes me assume that the front shaft turns even when in 2WD mode rather than just in 4WD or "AUTO" mode. This would make sense since there is no 4WD hub in the front and they use a conventional wheel bearing hub assembly with a hat-style brake rotor.
After installing the new U-joints, the vibration is gone and the tires, while they still ride harder than the Michelins, ride like they did when they were new. So, for the bad-mouthing of my Nitto Tires, I hereby apologize! They're a very good tire...but I still like my old Michelins better!
