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Bull ride question

diverman555

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Most of the time my M923A1 rides smooth on the freeways but on certain stretches of the freeway it gives you a bull ride effect. Bouncing from front to back, front to back bouncing. Could this be just the freeway in that area, or could the shocks be going bad? Like I had said it only does it in certain areas then it will stop, and when I go back over that area again it starts doing it again.
 

Jesse6325

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Sounds like harmonics between road speed and bumps in the highway. When I drove interstate there were sreches of road that would ride smooth as glass at 63 and 66 MPP, But at 64 and 65 the truck would act like it was galloping. Different highways/vehicles have thier sweet spots.
 

diverman555

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Thank you, the thing is if I go 65 on a section of I-94 it will buck, if I do 65 on 275 it does not buck.
I think it might be a combination of the 2 things. The road in that certain area and the speed.
You are right about the speed because if I slow to 60 it stops.
 

jedawson1

Member
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Location
Murfreesboro, TN
That is a common problem on older concrete roads, when I was driving I found that an empty truck was more prone to it than a loaded truck. There is a stretch of old hwy out of Birmingham, AL that is notorious for causing that bucking. Don't worry about, either adjust your speed, or try a different lane, a lot of times the passing lane ages much better due to less semi traffic.
 

diverman555

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We just put about 100 miles of freeway driving to be in a ARCA/ Nascar Event to display the truck and flags and to support our troops, and it bucked about 5% of the time I would change lanes and it would stop or change speeds. So I think it's just a combination of the road and speed.
Thank you all.
Mark
 

73m819

Rock = older than dirt , GA. MAFIA , Dirty
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Just looking at your title, I see it was done to make bull riding easier to search as It is one of the number one topics on a MV site, GOOD job, [thumbzup] :beer:, wish more would think along these lines, would really help in search, a good clean title
 

diverman555

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Detroit, michigan
Thank you:
I did spend a minute thinking about how to title it, because every other way I could think of it would come up in 5oo threads. What if I put shocks, or HELP bouncing. lol
Mark
 

Beerslayer

Well-known member
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Tualatin, Oregon
I have the same issue with both my m923 and my m35a2. Both have the big radial tires. I found that reducing the speed helps on both rigs.

Also I dropped the air pressure down to 35 lbs. That helped both the ride and handling.
 

quickfarms

Active member
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Location
Orange Junction, CA
You need to learn how to read the road. Paying attention to the cracks and tar sealer will give you an indication as to the road condition. Most of the freeways in this country are beyond there life expectancy and should be replaced.

One option is to put several thousand pounds in the back. You should cary around a restored jeep as a display.
 

91W350

Well-known member
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Location
Salina, Kansas
You will find that blacktop overlays will still transmit the concrete expansion cracks to the seat of your pants. Try US 81 between Yankton SD and Belleville KS.
 

Castle Bravo

Hundredaire Socialite
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Location
Arizona
When I first got my M818 5 ton, it would rock back and forth at speed. After reading a few threads here about it, I decided to move some wheels/tires around to different positions.

I can't seem to find it now, but somewhere I read that one should attempt to get the average of the combined rollout of the tires of each of the rear axles to be as close as possible. The differential will take care of any left to right variance, but there is no such differential between the rear axles, so if the tallest tires are on one axle and the shortest tires are on the other axle, the tall one will want to to "pass" the other one.

The shortest tires go together on one side of an axle with the tallest on the opposite side. The remaining tires go on the other axle in such a way to have the average rollout between the two axles as close as possible.

After I arranged the tires like this, my truck stopped its "bucking." This process is easier on a M923A1 because there are 4 less tires to deal with.
 

diverman555

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Detroit, michigan
One of the issues is on I-75 in Michigan when they replace parts of the freeway the will replace every other 10 ft. section of concrete if it is not all broke, so you end up with every section is at a different height that the others, which is what usually starts the bucking.
 

diverman555

In Memorial
In Memorial
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8
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Location
Detroit, michigan
Wreckerman, I did that with my wife once. I called her another womans name to see if I could stay
on for 8 seconds. Didn't make it, I heard bells ringing but I think it was from her punching me in the head. LOL
 
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