I was correct. There is a very small heat shield that protects the lower ball joint from the direct heat of the rotor. It only covers the area of the rotor covered by the knuckle. But sure enough it was definitely touching the rotor. Here is the noise:kevm14 wrote: ↑Sun Oct 25, 2020 5:56 am I worked on the car in my mind while in bed last night.
What I came up with is that there is probably a heat shield behind the rotor that I bent and is rubbing on the rotor. I jacked up the driver's side by the ball joint and the stud dug into the wood possibly enough for the wood to contact the bottom of the rotor. It may have bent that into the rotor somehow. So I have a hypothesis. I may also knock off the rust on the outer edge of the rotors with a wire wheel on a drill for good measure.
https://youtu.be/FVTQ06Ik4Ss
I simply bent it away and also got out a chisel and wire wheel and knocked off all the loose rust on the rotor, on the parts where the pad doesn't contact. I also did this to the passenger side though I don't think it was rubbing. Seemed like a good idea though while I was at it and the car was in the air.
Pro tip: turn off traction control when running the wheels of an AWD car, when only one end is raised. Otherwise the traction control may try to launch the car off the jack stands, by braking the front wheels which are "slipping" and sending power to the rear.
Other fun facts: AWD with open diffs and an open transfer case is really just 1 wheel drive unless traction control intervenes. I proved this because the rear was on the ground, and I was able to stop one of the front wheels from turning, leaving just the driver's side front wheel turning. The speed would have been 4x speedo indicated because of the doubling factor of the transfer case AND front diff. Kind of interesting.
But yeah, I road tested it and it's totally fixed!!
This car drives pretty damn good aside from the still failed engine mounts. It feels considerably better over uneven road than before. Also, this platform feels much more athletic than the E55. The steering is more direct and a better ratio. The suspension is frankly more sophisticated because I think MR shocks and coil springs are superior to air springs plus adjustable shocks. It turns in sharper, the chassis feels stiffer, it's just much better for cornering. Definitely slower but the trans works much more transparently which I also appreciate. I enjoyed driving it again.
Now I can order 2 front tires and get an alignment. I am going to switch the fronts to 255 to match the rears, so I can rotate in the future. Stock is 235/50. The rear is already a 255/45 and I'll just switch to that on the front, which was actually an available package. I will also ask them to rotate the rears to the front and put the new tires on the rear. Hopefully they can handle this and not get totally confused with the 235s (and replace the wrong tires or something).
Again the alignment actually feels decent but I'm sure it needs to be adjusted. Hopefully if it actually needs caster/camber, they will take the time to do that. I'll see if I can go over all of this with them or ideally, the tech.