Harsh riding '05 LX this can't be normal

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Mar 28, 2006
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Drove my wife's '05 LX today, and I cannot believe how harsh and rough it rides. The problem is most noticeable at slower speeds, and when you get to highway speed it's not too bad, but still...I can't believe a $66k vehicle would ride like this. In all seriousness, my 80 with 3" of lift and 35" Trxus rides better.

End of rant, now the facts:
Dunlop Grantrek, stock size, front PSI, 30, Rear 28. I don't know how many miles are on them, but they have less than %50 tread left.
AHC set to comfort. Ride height works, comfort/sport setting seems to do nothing for the harshness, although it corners marginally flatter in sport.
55K miles (purchased it at 35K miles, and it seems to have worsened since then)

I'm thinking tires, possibly. I would think michelins would ride better, but they need to be a lot better for this to be acceptable.

Is it possible that the wrong type of fluid in the AHC system would make it rock hard? I've never changed it out or added. I searched and found bad fluid causing sponginess, but not harshness.

Any ideas would be appreciated. Thanks.
 
AHC set to comfort. Ride height works, comfort/sport setting seems to do nothing for the harshness, although it corners marginally flatter in sport.

Yea, the height adjustment works. It's the fact that every bump can be felt, and it's the initial harshness, or impact of every bump that makes the truck ride poorly.
 
Something doesn't sound right at all. Check the AHC fluid graduations from Low to Hi mode. Tell us how much difference you read. Also, flush and change the AHC fluid. It is due at 60k anyway.
 
Thanks, the graduation marks are as follows:

Low setting: fluid at top-most graduation mark

Normal setting: 9 down from low

High setting: 4 down from normal, 13 graduation marks down from low
 
Those numbers are within normal limits. I don't have my FSM at the moment to further investigate this.
 
something simple like reading that they're set at 30F and 28R? :flipoff2:


Did you purchase the extended warranty or was it a CPO vehicle?? If you have the EW just drop it off and complain.
 
Those numbers are within normal limits. I don't have my FSM at the moment to further investigate this.

I've heard of a case on club lexus where the high to low gradations met the 7 gradation spec easily, yet the accumulators were still flat. I suspect the accumulator globes are dead. I definitely notice a difference between sport and comfort. When going over speed bumps in comfort, you won't bounce up much, as if riding in one of those old caddie's. In sport, you will bounce up as if you were driving a sports car w/ firm suspension. Just because your AHC will raise and lower the vehicle properly doesn't mean it's working. The damping is controlled by the accumulator globes, and when those are shot, you the ride will be harsh as if there were no shock absorbers. Since you have a '05, get it done under warranty ASAP, 'cause if you're out of warranty, it'll run 'ya $2.5K for new globes.
 
I agree, there is a very significant difference between comfort and sport mode. Was there ever a time where you had to add a lot of AHC fluid to the reservoir? I would first test the damping force actuators.

If you don't already have the FSM or the Toyota TIS, this would be a good time.
 
Same exact thing happend on our 03 LX. We needed new AHC spheres and sensors on all four corners.

Luckily it is still under CPO.

Good Luck
 
Have you tried deflating your tires a bit. Your tire may be over inflated?

I noticed a big difference in rides when I have over inflated tire vs at suggested pressure. Under inflated tires feels much more smoother but thats not wise though.

If not, then it could be air in your AHC? When i bled my AHC a few weeks ago, I had air bubbles in two of my corners. After the flush... my lx felt much more responsive at sports and smoother at comfort.
 
If the globes are shot, chances are, someone put the wrong fluid in the AHC resevoir. Anything but Toyota brand AHC fluid will destroy the globes. Otherwise, there's no way that new of a LX is going to develop bad globes. There are those on this board who have run theirs 120K+ miles w/o issues.

Oh, another thing I noticed...the tires can make a huge difference. I had old Pro Comp AT (LT-rated) tires on my 4runner @ 33psi (max rating of 50psi). They still had maybe 20% tread, but the ride was really harsh and the rubber was getting old and hard/cracked (I have a 2" OME lift w/ beefed up t-bars, ARB/Kaymar). Last weekend, I got new BFG AT's in the same 31" size, inflated to 40psi (LT tires, max of 50psi). The ride is plush in comparison, as if I were driving a new 4Runner or Taco. I'm amazed at the difference. The tires could be some of your difference. The Dunlops suck. The Bridgestone HT's suck offroad bigtime.
 
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I noticed there are bubbles in the reservoir top of the fluid. Is this normal? The fluid is dark brown.

The truck has 55K miles on it and no CPO warranty(see sig line) and the tires are at 30f, 28r (see first post).

I'm thinking the Dunlops are a lot of the problem. I'm going to replace the tires in the next month, they're borderline anyway. And I'll R&R the AHC fluid.
 
I noticed there are bubbles in the reservoir top of the fluid. Is this normal? The fluid is dark brown.

I do not see why there would be bubbles in the reservior. I would think it is containment that is like water and oil. It'll look like bubbles if water sits in the oil. This might be your case.
 
These are air bubbles. Uniform bubbles around the edge of the reservoir about the size of BB's.
 
Harsh riding LX-470 (3-4 yrs old)

These vehicles DO NOT ride harsh. Try this test to check the 4 accumulators on the struts. At normal ride height, run the wheels up on a curb, first front , then rear, pointing to and from the curb, then drive off quickly (not racing, just smartly) the goal is to 'bounce' each end. If the accumulators are gone, it will bounce like there is no suspension, hard, rapid un-damped bounce--cause its only the tires giving. OTOH, if the 'bounce' is well absorbed, then the suspension accumulators are OK.

The 'shocks' are simple single acting hydraulic cylinders, just like a hydraulic jack. Nothing inside them effects the ride. All the 'shock dampening' is in the 16 position electronically dampening valves to which the accumulators mount. All the 'absorption' of shock is in the accumulators. When the OEM nitrogen leaks out, there is no place for oil from the 'jacks' to go when you hit a bump.

Recently had 2 more customers experience early failure (<18 months) of Dealer OEM replacements. OUCH!. >$4,000 parts and labor.
 
A lot of people mentioned tire pressure, and it does make a big difference... did you check it?

The recommended pressure is on your info sticker on the driver door's inner area, or use the numbers 1LoudLX gave you. These #'s are probably about 5 psi lower than those Dunlops max value.

Dunlop GT AT20s are for freakin' Tundras and Sequoias, not LXs!
 
I keep my ride setting one click to the right of the middle (little more sporty) and run my tires at 30 psi all around but I have the Michelin LTX tires which are way better then the Dunflops. My ride is a little more sporty but not at all harsh.
 

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