Pulling fairly hard to the right completely stock

DWill29

New member
Hello,

I recently bought a 2016 Wrangler from a used car dealership. I noticed it pulled to the right while driving, to the point where I have to hold the steering wheel a little to the left and if I let go of the steering wheel I will veer of the road. I told that to the dealership and they said they would do an alignment. They did an alignment and I still had the same issue. They then told me they believe it is handling normally and that I can take it to a Jeep dealership and have them look at it. I then took it to a Jeep dealership and after the Tech drove it, he said it is definitely not handling correctly. They did an alignment and it was a little out of spec, so they brought it back into spec. I then drove it and after about 5 minutes of driving and hitting a couple bumps it started pulling to the right again just like it was before. So I brought it back to Jeep and this time the Tech drove it and said its handling fine. I then asked my rep to drive it and he said he noticed it pulled to the right, but only on crowned roads, and it did the same to the left side (Which doesn't happen with me). He said it's fine on flat roads. He also said that he talked to another Tech there and he said that's typical for Wranglers. I talked to a coworker with a Wrangler JKU and he said it shouldn't be doing that, he can let go of the steering wheel on the highway and stay straight, where when I do that I veer off into the bar pit.

I was wondering if anyone has advice on what I should do, or if this is normal?

Thank you.
 

JKbrick

Active Member
I would tell them to pay to get to the bottom of the problem or give you your money back. All jeeps don’t normally pull to the right. Get the manager in the passenger seat and take him for a ride and let go of the wheel at about 70 mph


Sent from my iPhone using WAYALIFE mobile app
 

ammojustin

New member
I didn’t have this on a Jeep but did have it on another truck. I’d look at the front calipers. Especially the side that it pulls to. Mine was locking up and not relieving pressure on the rotor which cause the constant pull. Just one options. But let us know if you find anything else.


Sent from my iPhone using WAYALIFE mobile app
 

DWill29

New member
I would tell them to pay to get to the bottom of the problem or give you your money back. All jeeps don’t normally pull to the right. Get the manager in the passenger seat and take him for a ride and let go of the wheel at about 70 mph


Sent from my iPhone using WAYALIFE mobile app

I didn’t have this on a Jeep but did have it on another truck. I’d look at the front calipers. Especially the side that it pulls to. Mine was locking up and not relieving pressure on the rotor which cause the constant pull. Just one options. But let us know if you find anything else.


Sent from my iPhone using WAYALIFE mobile app

They're blowing you off. Make them fix it. Not normal.

Thanks everyone! I’ll talk with them in person tomorrow.
 

mallavoider

New member
I would also look at the tires themselves. Is one side more worn out than the other side? What about tire pressure. Equal all around? The place that did the alignment, are they familiar with your Jeep? Is it lifted?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

DK570

New member
What's the simplest way to check for a bum caliper? My Jeep is also on stock suspension, but has a pull despite rotating tires, and getting an alignment. I'm still under warranty, so I'd like a very clear way to show the service writer it's the problem. I don't want to deal with "that's normal" or "unable to replicate problem"
 

Parks34

New member
What's the simplest way to check for a bum caliper? My Jeep is also on stock suspension, but has a pull despite rotating tires, and getting an alignment. I'm still under warranty, so I'd like a very clear way to show the service writer it's the problem. I don't want to deal with "that's normal" or "unable to replicate problem"

Sorry for the late reply. Whichever way it's pulling, after a drive you will notice that wheel is extremely hot compared to the others, burn your fingers to the touch. Also if you jack it up and take the wheel off, spin the brake by hand. You should be able to tell if the caliper is locked from that


Sent from my iPhone using WAYALIFE mobile app
 

JKbrick

Active Member
Sorry for the late reply. Whichever way it's pulling, after a drive you will notice that wheel is extremely hot compared to the others, burn your fingers to the touch. Also if you jack it up and take the wheel off, spin the brake by hand. You should be able to tell if the caliper is locked from that


Sent from my iPhone using WAYALIFE mobile app

That’s a good excuse to get one of those digital pointing thermometers


Sent from my iPhone using WAYALIFE mobile app
 
Top Bottom