Other than an alignment, I don't know quite what to tell them. And I don't have a mechanic, anyways.It jerks, with vary degrees of severity, like I'm going to slow for the gear...as I accelerate through the gear's range, my car shakes a little violently, like it would if I were going too slow. Now, this could all be attributed to me still being new to a stick, but since it hasn't always been doing this (started early December; I've had the car since October), I'm not inclined to think so. It's also started shuddering while idling in the past week or soAnd is a 'tune up' just kind of code for 'fix anything that's slightly awry, but not worth its own trip in, and make my happy'?93 Ford Escort with just under 100K
1/28/2008 9:35:42 AM
is the shake accompanied by loss of power (like if you were going too slow for that gear) or just a shake by itself.I'm going to say something with the clutch assembly, possibly the pilot bearing gone to hell.
1/28/2008 9:50:51 AM
Just the shake.[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 9:53 AM. Reason : I went ahead and got a ref from my grandfather, and I told the guy, and I go in next thursday]
1/28/2008 9:52:45 AM
why don't you let somebody who knows how to drive a stick drive it, and see if it still shake then?
1/28/2008 10:00:24 AM
1/28/2008 10:07:56 AM
[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:20 AM. Reason : being nice]
1/28/2008 10:19:17 AM
a couple of key things you mentioned lead me to believe you might have a cylinder not firing (miss). the vibration is just a side effect of that. from what you're describing, it was probably intermittent at first, and now a cylinder isn't firing (missing) at all for one reason or another. as to what's causing it, that could be a lot of different things... it could also be something completely different, it's hard to diagnose such a thing over the internet. so, i'll ask a couple of questions that might narrow it down:1. does it smooth out when you let off the gas or are slowing down?2. have you noticed any decrease in power or difference in gas mileage?3. is the frequency/severity of it affected by vehicle speed or engine speed (rpm's)?as for a tune up, it basically just consists of replacing basic/simple wear parts. it's what other people might call general maintenance also. it can include replacement of the following, but isn't limited to them:-spark plugs-plug wires-distributor cap and rotor button (if applicable)-air filter-fluids change or at least check levels-beltsit's definitely something worth doing every so often. especially on older vehicles that don't have the extended service intervals of newer vehicles. it helps with driveability, gas mileage, and reliability.
1/28/2008 10:26:02 PM