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Chevrolet Malibu Engine Problems

76 messages, Last post on Oct 26, 2009 at 8:11 PM
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Replying to: station_dog (Sep 22, 2009 11:17 pm) I've seen them as a solid cast that is drilled to remove weight for balancing or has added weights. I've seen them with an inner hub and outer separated by a layer of rubber. I've seen much older ones that had weights inside that moved like a pendulum. That was to help at idle and they would achieve there maximum centrifugal force at some RPM above idle. Now that balancers are brought up, I have to wonder if that might be what I hear on neighbors suburban. Damn thing sounds like it is about to throw a rod at idle. I mentioned it to him when vehicle was new. He said he asked dealer and they said it was normal and he listened to several of them there, all making the same deadened clunk like a slapping piston. If it is wobbling like a bent wheel, then I'd definitely check with dealer. It might be a latest technology where the mounting hole is drilled to match the engine balance. Sounds strange, but that could be the case. Many years ago, one of my Dad's friends bought a vehicle that had no valve stem on the wheel. That blew the mind of many including the mechanics at the garage. Like how the heck did they air the tire up? The dealer told him that a machine was used for mounting the tires on the wheels. It encapsulated both (safety) and pressure inside as the tire was being mounted provided inflation before it was removed. The drilling for the valve stem was done afterwards. I guess that could work, but beware what the dealer tells you too. |
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I have a 2005 Malibu V-6 with 83K miles. Yesterday afternoon when I started the car, the starter really drew down the electrical to the point that it almost didn't start the car. The battery is 3 years old. Back from the 60's to the 80's if this happened, it was more than likely the starter drawing too many amps and I'd replace the starter. But my question is, on a 2005 model car, would it more than likely still be the starter or some other computer/sensor related problem? It drew so many amps that the clock on the radio re-set to noon. I drove to the grocery store and crossed my fingers when I cranked it up again and it did fine. I'm thinking to replace the starter, just so I don't get stuck. Thanks for your thoughts.
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Replying to: fungus440 (Oct 05, 2009 2:33 am) Head lights being dim, or going almost totally out when trying to crank are also a good indication of battery, especially if you get the clacking sound of the solenoid. Fords especially, if there is no solenoid clacking, it is likely the starter. Even then, for it to draw so many amps to kill lighting, be careful. You could easily smoke some wiring. |
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Replying to: 06malibune (Mar 27, 2009 5:01 am) |
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