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I am having some problems with my stupid car, and I keep getting the runaround on what it wrong with it.
I barely have brakes. When I stop, I slide. I thought it was my tires (they were in BAD shape), so I got new ones. I was told it was my ABS box under the hood, it needed to be bled. So I did that. I still slide and the brakes go to the floor when I am stopped. I have to put it in park so I don't hit the person in front of me. What could be wrong.
On to the next dilemma. Something is eating at my tires. I go through tires within a month. Late last year the control arm broke, and it was fixed. Since then, something is tearing up the inner side of the tires. Auto Zone said it was the stabilizer bar..that the bolts were wore down and needed to be replaced. I don't even know where to start in replacing those. I think a shock might need to be replaced, but would that do that to both sides of my tires.... Please help me.

2007-04-10 05:25:44 · 3 answers · asked by Baby girl born on 8/29/08!!!!!!! 4 in Cars & Transportation Car Makes Acura

3 answers

If the brake pedal is dropping to the floor when you have constant pressure on the pedal at a stop then you have a hydraulic leak inside of your brake master cylinder. Basically a seal on the piston inside the master cylinder is not holding the pressure to each of the wheels and as the pressure drops the pedal drops. That is also why your brakes lock up--there is no pressure to modulate or cushion the engagement of the brakes. You need to have the master cylinder replaced immediately for your own safety.

the wear on the tire is because the front suspension is out of alignment. there is a good chance that they never did an alignment when they repaired the control arm problem or, if they did, then the alignment has gone out of spec since then. If the alignment cannot be set to within the factory specifications, there may be other damage that was not repaired from the time of the control arm problem. Tires wear on the inside from excessive "toe-out" or from excessive negative camber. The camber on most front wheel drive cars is not adjustable without doing some modifications and installing a camber kit. More likely your problem is with 'toe-out'. You can experience that by standing with the toes of your shoes facing straight ahead then then turning your right foot to the right so that there is an angle of about 20 degrees. then slide your right foot forward and you'll feel all of the pressure on the inside of your big toe. If you did that for any period of time you'd get a blister inside the ball of your foot because you would wear the skin off. That's the effect of toe-out--you're constantly rubbing off the inside of the tire by pushing against it as your going down the road.

have the alignment checked after you replace the master cylinder. In all probablility it can be reset to stop your tire wear. if it cannot be reset within spec then the alignment technician should be able to tell you why it cant be and what repairs are required at that time

hope that helps

2007-04-10 06:37:31 · answer #1 · answered by honda guy 7 · 2 0

attempt replacing the air clear out, the gasoline clear out, examine the ignition timing / crank attitude sensor, oxygen sensor, examine brakes aren't from now on binding, make positive you've sufficient air contained in the tyres, attempt resetting the ecu, sparkling the injectors, examine the exhuast isn't cogged, do not use overdrive less than 80 km/hr, attempt no longer to quit & start up right away etc etc

2016-12-03 19:13:14 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

it sounds like your brake pads and callipers are bad and your tire problem is a bad allignment from who ever changed the control arm

2007-04-10 05:49:57 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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