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Anonymous Posted on Dec 01, 2010

I get significant vibration when decelerating, most signficantly at speeds above 40 mph to coming to a complete halt. I am not sure if the brakes are going out, or the suspension or both. Any help would be appreciated.

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Nic McCully

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  • Expert 195 Answers
  • Posted on Dec 01, 2010
Nic McCully
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Some jeeps have a hydraulic stabilizer(looks like a shock mounted sideways under the front end) they use to stabilize the front end. When this goes bad can cause an out of control shake in the front end(steering wheel), very common for jeeps.


Please take a moment and rate my answer...............Thanks

Testimonial: "appreciate the help, i think i should also replace the brakes...rotors, calipers, and pads...do you have to buy all those individually?"

  • 2 more comments 
  • Nic McCully Dec 01, 2010

    Yes you do.

  • m38toy Feb 19, 2011

    It could also be a track bar, or bolt joints

  • Busted Knuckle
    Busted Knuckle Apr 22, 2014

    The stabilizer is there to dampen harsh steering from the tires trying to jerk the steering when they hit a rock or rut when off road. Any truck including jeeps should drive fine on the road without any stabilizer mounted to the steering. If you\'re getting a vibration the likely cause is warped rotors. Find a length of road where you\'re alone and get it up to speed and apply the brakes as you normally do and when you feel the vibration let off the brake. If the vibration stops it\'s in the brakes. Loose steering components will amplify the problem. Also try to "feel" is the vibration is more seat of the pants, steering wheel or the brake pedal itself.

  • Busted Knuckle
    Busted Knuckle Apr 22, 2014

    You usually do the rotors and pads at the same time but it's not very likely you need to do the calipers. Unless you find something wrong with one or both I wouldn't replace the calipers.

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PROCEDURE 3
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