Motorway speeds and steering

ChillZ4

Member
In the fast lane doing 70+ I seem to expience slight deviations in the steering. Its like tiny movements. Could also be slightly twitchy??? Any ideas? Its an 06 3.0si on RFT.

Thanks
 
you do more than 70 mph :o :P

Sounds a bit like tramlining - is it worse in the 'slow' lane ? Fat tyres are prone to this - having said that mine doesn't do it anymore on different RFT brand :D
 
I'm blaming it on the RFTs (or at least I hope that's what it is) after reading a lot on here. I find I have to make a lot of small steering corrections, much more than any other car I've driven.

Could also be the alignment? :?
 
RFT's, i drove the car back 100 motorway miles when i picked mine up and just thought what is going on here. Its simply that our roads are rubbish, slow lane is the worse. Had the car nearly a month now and starting to ignore/learn to live with the tramlining. Is annoying when your braking and the cars pulling you all over the road.
 
ChillZ4
I'm experiencing exactly the same, or I think it is. On a good smooth surface such as the outside lane the car requires constant minor correction, not that it's steering off course just that the wheel pulls left/right requiring 1/4" movement from left to right. Tramlining is a lot worse, crossing ruts, crossing centre white lines you need to be awake.

I've changed tyres to non RFT's and had a top notch full geometry test done and it's all in tolerance. Lowering my tyres to 30 rear and 28 front has helped (don't do this on the RFT's) . Fitting a ftrut bar has if anything highlighted it.

I'm now comfortable it's just a trait of the wide tyres, poor roads, and suspension system.
 
MICHELIN PILOT SPORT PS2 ZP (for Zero Pressure) same size as the bridgestone, mines on 18" wheels...

I get no twitchy ness and no tramlining and no hard crashy ride (still firm as you would expect) :thumbsup:
 
cj10jeeper said:
ChillZ4
I'm experiencing exactly the same, or I think it is. On a good smooth surface such as the outside lane the car requires constant minor correction, not that it's steering off course just that the wheel pulls left/right requiring 1/4" movement from left to right. Tramlining is a lot worse, crossing ruts, crossing centre white lines you need to be awake.

I've changed tyres to non RFT's and had a top notch full geometry test done and it's all in tolerance. Lowering my tyres to 30 rear and 28 front has helped (don't do this on the RFT's) . Fitting a ftrut bar has if anything highlighted it.

I'm now comfortable it's just a trait of the wide tyres, poor roads, and suspension system.

Yep thats exactly what I have got!
 
Just a bit to offer here. If you have not had an alignment since you picked it up from the dealer, they have a bunch of settings in the alignment. Right after I had my first alignment the car felt very twichy with all the settings removed. I like the way the car handles now and so do the tires.
 
its a slight effect of the sticky steering of the EPS in my opinion.

i have the same feel through all of 3 EPS, with either RFTs or conventional tires on 17s and 18s
 
melbs said:
its a slight effect of the sticky steering of the EPS in my opinion.

i have the same feel through all of 3 EPS, with either RFTs or conventional tires on 17s and 18s

melbs - can you explain that statement of 'sticky steering' please?

Whatever is wrong with mine has deteriorated so it's either mechanical in toe in, camber castor, etc. or related to the EPS giging continous unrequired minor input. I jus t need to find out which, why and fix it for good.
 
cgj10jeeper there are lots of posts on here about sticky steering on pre facelift cars, you might want to do a search if you have similar problems. :)
 
Sticky steering only happens in the heat, like where Melbs is, not in the UK at the moment :D

I had the whole steering house replaced after my sticky steering in my '04 3.0. Made a big difference, for sure.
 
OK so read all the threads on 'sticky steering' and I do not think that's it. This appears to be where temperature causes the steering to be stiff, lock up, etc.

My steering issue is very different and it's as if the steering motor were continually adding minor left and right inputs in. Actual turning, cornering, lock to lock, etc are all perferct. Today 100 miles of 70 to 80 mph on the motorway was tiresome an dironically the smoother the tarmac I found the worst it was :headbang:
 
Update, had the car serviced today and had the steering checked, no problems found. Also has a full allignment done. It does seem slighty better but still get the twitches at speed. I am putting it down the the RFTs, suspension etc.
 
after driving mine home i know what you mean, its tramlining, i was merrily going at 65 in the slow lane, one hand on the wheel and the car dived a bit to the left, as id read about this i wasnt too concerned, i found it the same in and out of sport mode.
 
I'm certainly no expert on steering, nor am I on "tramlining," but the February issue of Bimmer had a nice Tech Q&A tidbit on this subject.

A gent wrote in to ask, essentially, if the tendency of his car, a 2008 Z4 3.0si, to track with road irregularities was due to his RFT-Bridgestone Potenza REO 50As. He was also concerned if this would lead to early wear of the steering components.

The tech answered:

"Nice car! What you have described is called "tramlining"... (and) ...is very common on modern high-performance sports cars in general, not just the Z4, and is caused by problems with the road, not the car. To the extent that tires are a factor, it is their larger size rather than their run-flat capability. While would not rule out the possibility that tramlining may be affected by a change from run-flat tires to normal tires, think you're probably just going to have to steer through it when it happens. don't think tramlining will have any affect on suspension component wear."

I have no doubt that switching from RFTs to non-RFTs will improve the ride comfort, simply by default of the less stiff construction of the latter. But I am doubtful that tramlining is the sole fault of RFTs in and of themselves (they probably don't help though).

Anyway, that's somebody else's 2-cents... I just thopught it was interesting and worth sharing (I love the Tech Q&A secion in Bimmer).

Cheers.
 
In would like to add that since RFT's have a thicker sidewall, they tend to flex less, leading to the tramlining.
 
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