Tom Jennings wrote: > On Mon, 19 Feb 2007, Matt Haas wrote: > >> I also learned today what it sounds like when a tie rod end is shoved >> into a tire > > Wow, that's scary! Sounds like you got away OK. > > How and why did the part fail? Bad casting? Tom, It looks like a stupid design. Since my intended stop was the grocery store, I didn't want to get dirty handling busted parts but what it looks like is that the top of the joint wasn't a beefy casting like I'm used to seeing. I haven't gone through receipts but I think this is the second driver's side outer tie rod end for the truck (the pitman arm went about 100,000 miles and I think it had a ball joint around that time) and both lasted about the same amount of time so I'm not too terribly surprised it needed replaced again. It is a scary failure mode (and even worse is that it checked out fine when it was aligned around Christmas) and I am truly grateful that it went on the way to the store yesterday and not on the highway on the way to work. I'm still amazed that I was able to drive it the mile and a half to where it was fixed without the tire blowing out. I live on a pretty windy road and took it easy but still, one wheel steering isn't exactly cool. Matt -- mhaas@xxxxxxx Cincinnati, OH http://www.mattsoldcars.com 1967 Rambler American wagon 1968 Rambler American sedan =============================================================== According to a February survey of Internet holdouts released by UCLA's Center for Communication Policy, people cite not having a computer as the No. 1 reason they won't go online. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list