Aaalright, so truck was still pulling right. We were tired of dealing with ****ty shops, so went looking for some place with really good reviews. We found a shop in Durango that looked promising, so started working our way over there.
Turns out our route accidentally included the southern side of the Alpine Loop in Colorado. Neither of us had noticed this (we'd just routed it stairing at a map) until we got there. Someone had told us you needed a Jeep to do it, and we'd have wheelbase problems.
They were full of it. We had a great time and no trouble. In fact, it's actually a very easy trail compared to what we do daily... the only issue was that our cheepo all-pro front-suspension makes for a bit of a rough ride for my girlfriend's liking on that long a stretch of road... but hey, it works.
IMG_20170527_154836 by
smalladventures photos, on Flickr
IMG_20170527_155020 by
smalladventures photos, on Flickr
Anyway, we made our appointment in Durango and after telling them our story they took a look. They called me back telling me the right rear brake was locking up. The previous shop we'd been to had supposedly tightened them, and apparently had done so too much. I'd checked the left-rear already, thinking maybe it was a frozen hydrolic there, but hadn't checked the right rear. They fixed that, but it still pulled right.
Next, they took it for a test drive and found that the front disks were different temperatures after braking, and concluded it needed new calipers. Okay, makes sense, so they replaced the calipers and the two brake disks were now the same temperature. Great! But... it still right.
Looking at it, they found that the shop that did our lower a-arm bushings had done something seriously weird with them. I'd gotten suspicious that this might be the case. It looks like they replaced some washers and stuff, but not the actual bushings... one of the bushings actually had a small chunk missing! It was quite easy to see.
So, today that shop is replacing the lower A-arm bushings.
I'm strongly suspicious that the first shop didn't do much of what we'd asked them to do (and payed them for). Based on the alignment afterwards it looks like they didn't align the truck, and based on looking at the bushings, they didn't replace the bushings. So, my theory is that the first shop did do the rack bushings, but also *broke* the rack while doing that work (since it the truck had been fine before that just loose steering, that's when things went wonky). Second shop replaced the tie-rode ends, but weren't bright enough to figure out that the rack was broken, overtightened the right rear brake drum, never checked the brake temperature, and blamed everything on my suspension. It's good to finally be at a shop that's actually fixing my problems... We're at something like $5k in to trying to fix this! Something like $500 for the rack bushings $1000 for the A-arm bushings first time, $1000 for new tie-rod ends $1000 for new rack, $500 for new front calipers, $1000 for new A-arm bushings (again). FYI, the good shop is Durango Brake and Muffler. Nice folks!
Of my 3 guesses (I'd added one after my last post, the rear drum, but thought I eliminated it by checking the left rear brake)... it was all 3... Damn.
Good news is that I'll have nearly a complete front-end rebuild when this is done, so hopefully the truck will be good for some time to come.