norsairius
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2023
- Threads
- 3
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- 93
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- 86
- Location
- United States
- Car(s)
- 2024 Acura Integra Type S
- Thread starter
- #1
Well, it happened: I hit a pothole at highway speeds. Short sidewalls + relatively stiff suspension = loud thud. I immediately switched to the tire pressure gauge and thankfully saw no drops in tire pressure since then beyond what's normal with temperature fluctuations and the car sitting overnight.
I'm not hearing any grinding and it's not quite a hum, but it leans more towards a howl that's more noticeable at speeds of ~50-55mph or above. If I listen carefully though, I can hear it at slower speeds that are around ~25-30mph too. If the car is in Sport+, the engine/exhaust can pretty easily drown out the noise.
I jacked the car up and shook the heck out of each wheel to check for any play. I also spun each wheel and they all made the same whisper-like metal-on-metal sound. I haven't noticed any additional vibrations through the steering wheel or seat.
Despite the physical check on my part, I'm still paranoid I might have damaged a wheel bearing because of this pothole strike. I'm wondering too though if the sound could be the tires themselves.
I unfortunately didn't drive the car a lot with the stock wheel/tire set because I had to swap to my winter set in less than two months after getting it and I only just swapped back to the stock set within the past couple weeks. I never got much time to familiarize myself with the overall feel and sounds of the stock wheels/tires on the car and I admit I didn't pay a lot of attention until after I hit this pothole. From the little I recall though, the Michelin PS4S did seem to be fairly noisy and my winter set seemed to be quieter.
Has anyone else who's driven on the stock wheels/tires noticed more road/tire noise that resembles a howl, by any chance? I'll probably schedule a dealer visit just to be safe, but I thought I'd check with folks here too.
I'm not hearing any grinding and it's not quite a hum, but it leans more towards a howl that's more noticeable at speeds of ~50-55mph or above. If I listen carefully though, I can hear it at slower speeds that are around ~25-30mph too. If the car is in Sport+, the engine/exhaust can pretty easily drown out the noise.
I jacked the car up and shook the heck out of each wheel to check for any play. I also spun each wheel and they all made the same whisper-like metal-on-metal sound. I haven't noticed any additional vibrations through the steering wheel or seat.
Despite the physical check on my part, I'm still paranoid I might have damaged a wheel bearing because of this pothole strike. I'm wondering too though if the sound could be the tires themselves.
I unfortunately didn't drive the car a lot with the stock wheel/tire set because I had to swap to my winter set in less than two months after getting it and I only just swapped back to the stock set within the past couple weeks. I never got much time to familiarize myself with the overall feel and sounds of the stock wheels/tires on the car and I admit I didn't pay a lot of attention until after I hit this pothole. From the little I recall though, the Michelin PS4S did seem to be fairly noisy and my winter set seemed to be quieter.
Has anyone else who's driven on the stock wheels/tires noticed more road/tire noise that resembles a howl, by any chance? I'll probably schedule a dealer visit just to be safe, but I thought I'd check with folks here too.
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