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Скачать с ютуб Mercedes Rumble strip sound (RSN) during slow acceleration (w209,w203 etc.) в хорошем качестве

Mercedes Rumble strip sound (RSN) during slow acceleration (w209,w203 etc.) 6 лет назад


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Mercedes Rumble strip sound (RSN) during slow acceleration (w209,w203 etc.)

Car is a 2002 Mercedes CLk320 with 170,000 Km's on the clock, but the make and model is irrelevant this can happen to any car or truck model. I would say this is a very rare failure on most cars and it's probably why so many people have replaced the wrong parts trying to diagnose the issue. The most common source of the RSN according to the internet in Mercedes cars is if the transmission and coolant fluids are mixing and the torque converter is blamed, I highly doubt the RSN is ever the torque converter as I just can't see how it could possibly make such a noise and probably explains why it's almost impossible on the internet to find someone who has confirmed that replacing their transmission did fix the problem. Hope this video helps many people and they don't end up wasting a tone of money on what should be easily detectable by any mechanic yet somehow it seems that everyone has really struggled to find the culprit including myself. Symptoms: Around 60KPH you hear a a sound as if you are driving over rumble strips and it only happens if you are accelerating slowly as soon as you touch the accelerator a little harder the noise goes away. The issue also seems to come around the 100KPH mark as well. You will feel no vibration in the steering wheel, seems to be mainly felt in the vehicles floor and seats. I must stress that in my situation the transmission is shifting fine and has no slipping. If your transmission is slipping it may be the torque converter although honestly I can't see how it could make such a noise. Video shows you an easy way to check your U-joint and drive shaft for play.

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