1998 Montero rear end noise

Martin_X

New member
My 1998 Montero has been at a rear-end specialist in Los Angeles for over a month now, and they still haven't been able to diagnose a whine in the drivetrain from the rear of the vehicle over about 50mph. They swapped out the rear end and the noise has mysteriously remained. They also swapped the front dif. after it started making noise. The front is now quiet. I am not sure how to proceed as these guys were described as the best in the area for any kind of differential issues. I also took it to a transmission shop that confirmed the noise is coming from the rear, not the tranny. I was told someone in the shop wants to buy it off of me and not concerned about the noise. This is a 1998 Montero with the rear locker, and about 150,000 miles. I have seen similar vehicles on Craigslist for exorbitant sums recently (over 15k), not sure if people are actually buying these. My original goal was to fix it up and drive it for a few seasons before selling it off, not sure if I'll be able to sell it for a good price with this kind of noise. Any advice on a way to resolve the issue, or should I sell it to the mechanic? I'm not against holding on to it for a bit longer, but the repairs have started to add up.
 

Salonika

Monterror Pilot
What Charlie said might sound funny, but could very well be the source of your sound. I have actually had this happen to me before. If you have a decent spare tire try running it on each side of the rear for a drive, see if the sound changes at all.
 

lev

Member
There's a tool called ChassisEar that can help with finding suspension/driveline whine/bump sources. It's finicky to wire up (lots of duct tape and zip ties), and then you need a second person to drive while you listen, but it can help localize the specific area making noise. Comparing the sound between the diff housing and wheel bearing housing can help figure out which part's closer to the problem. It could also be some sort of resonance on body/wheel arches due to worn body mounts. A methodical approach helps a lot here.
 
Last edited:

Martin_X

New member
There's a tool called ChassisEar that can help with finding suspension/driveline whine/bump sources. It's finicky to wire up (lots of duct tape and zip ties), and then you need a second person to drive while you listen, but it can help localize the specific area making noise. Comparing the sound between the diff housing and wheel bearing housing can help figure out which part's closer to the problem. It could also be some sort of resonance on body/wheel arches due to worn body mounts. A methodical approach helps a lot here.
Thanks for the suggestion, I will look into it.
 

Martin_X

New member
What Charlie said might sound funny, but could very well be the source of your sound. I have actually had this happen to me before. If you have a decent spare tire try running it on each side of the rear for a drive, see if the sound changes at all.
I should have been more specific, the noise only occurs over 50mph while under throttle, which led me to think it was dif related.
 

ChargerX3

Observer
They swapped out the 3rd member? Could be a bad axle bearing if they did. Those are outboard and possible failure points.
 
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