thehellend
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I took Bacon to the mechanic to diagnose, but they couldn't find the problem. Color me disappointed. They did suggest it was coming from near the transmission, which filled me with dread. So I'm wondering if you wonderful skilled people might be able to point me in a better direction. Note: I'm new to mechanics, so talk down to me a little so I can follow along
Here's what's happening:
Edit to add: Chevy Van G20. 1986, with 109k miles. It started after I drove her back, so it's either a new issue or one that just 'woke up' again after being sat for 2 years. When I drive her at speeds of 20mph or more, I start to hear this sort of rhythmic squeak or chirp coming from under the hood. I can't pinpoint where exactly, but as mentioned above, the mechanic thinks it's from near the transmission area. They were very quick to tell me this was just an educated guess though, as it was tough to diagnose without actually driving the vehicle (and I don't pay them enough to hang on to the underneath while it's moving!)
It seems to move in time with the wheel revolutions - so it gets faster as I speed up. It doesn't change in pitch though. It is constant as long as I'm over that speed, whether I'm accelerating or braking. I had the belts replaced, and they apparently checked the U-joints (it was the desk dude who told me, "yeah they looked good" so I'm not 100% convinced he knew what was going on). I read somewhere it could be something to do with the carrier bearing yoke, whatever that is, especially as I read about a thud noise that can happen and I'm sure I heard that happen last night.
With limited experience of driving her with the issue, I think it happens at lower speeds while the engine is cold, and then reverts to the 20mph rule once warmed up. But this isn't yet proven with a good sample size of experiences.
So with this information, can any of you point me in a good direction to get this diagnosed. Honestly I'm willing to pay for the work, but I really don't want to drop another fee to hear "we can't get close enough to figure it out" - I just want to resolve it before whatever it is breaks on me. I'm of the mentality that cars don't heal, and this issue will only get worse and more expensive the longer I leave it.
Or just words of encouragement in case my transmission is about to explode on me. That'd also be appreciated.
Here's what's happening:
Edit to add: Chevy Van G20. 1986, with 109k miles. It started after I drove her back, so it's either a new issue or one that just 'woke up' again after being sat for 2 years. When I drive her at speeds of 20mph or more, I start to hear this sort of rhythmic squeak or chirp coming from under the hood. I can't pinpoint where exactly, but as mentioned above, the mechanic thinks it's from near the transmission area. They were very quick to tell me this was just an educated guess though, as it was tough to diagnose without actually driving the vehicle (and I don't pay them enough to hang on to the underneath while it's moving!)
It seems to move in time with the wheel revolutions - so it gets faster as I speed up. It doesn't change in pitch though. It is constant as long as I'm over that speed, whether I'm accelerating or braking. I had the belts replaced, and they apparently checked the U-joints (it was the desk dude who told me, "yeah they looked good" so I'm not 100% convinced he knew what was going on). I read somewhere it could be something to do with the carrier bearing yoke, whatever that is, especially as I read about a thud noise that can happen and I'm sure I heard that happen last night.
With limited experience of driving her with the issue, I think it happens at lower speeds while the engine is cold, and then reverts to the 20mph rule once warmed up. But this isn't yet proven with a good sample size of experiences.
So with this information, can any of you point me in a good direction to get this diagnosed. Honestly I'm willing to pay for the work, but I really don't want to drop another fee to hear "we can't get close enough to figure it out" - I just want to resolve it before whatever it is breaks on me. I'm of the mentality that cars don't heal, and this issue will only get worse and more expensive the longer I leave it.
Or just words of encouragement in case my transmission is about to explode on me. That'd also be appreciated.