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RX400H droning sound at motorway speed.


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Over the last week or so, whilst using our RX400H for some longer trips, i have discovered that there is a droning sound which is audible above about 50MPH.  The sound is a constant tone and more or less constant loudness.  It is audible in the background above all other sounds, although it is quietish.  I think it is coming from somewhere in the front of the car.  Is this a characteristic sound of the CVT transmission or engine at these speeds (I have no idea of the engine speed - but throttle is light)?

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5 minutes ago, welland said:

Over the last week or so, whilst using our RX400H for some longer trips, i have discovered that there is a droning sound which is audible above about 50MPH.  The sound is a constant tone and more or less constant loudness.  It is audible in the background above all other sounds, although it is quietish.  I think it is coming from somewhere in the front of the car.  Is this a characteristic sound of the CVT transmission or engine at these speeds (I have no idea of the engine speed - but throttle is light)?

A whining noise is normal at motorway speeds when lifting off the throttle. Its something to do with the generators.

Has been extensively covered on other threads but I cant seem to find them

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36 minutes ago, rayaans said:

A whining noise is normal at motorway speeds when lifting off the throttle. Its something to do with the generators.

Has been extensively covered on other threads but I cant seem to find them

I have recollections of similar threads too, but I can't find them either.  However, I'm getting a constant sound when cruising at steady speed - not just when lifting off.  

I sometimes get a similar sound at slower speeds when accelerating, and that's whatr made me think it may be the CVT transmission.  

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A droning sound especially at around 50mph could well be from a tyre.  I've had this twice and both times it was a tyre out of shape, even though it looked fine tread wise.  It sounded like a bearing or similar but completely went with new tyres.

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5 hours ago, welland said:

 (I have no idea of the engine speed - but throttle is light)?

50 mph with a light throttle, the engine is probably only spinning at 2,000 rpm. Put your foot down, the power meter should climb, and the engine will rev around 4,000 rpm. At that point you should be able to hear the engine and tell if the drone is related to the engine or not.

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17 hours ago, The-Acre said:

A droning sound especially at around 50mph could well be from a tyre.  I've had this twice and both times it was a tyre out of shape, even though it looked fine tread wise.  It sounded like a bearing or similar but completely went with new tyres.

Thats a good shout and more likely with a budget tyre

Damn Sunny SN3800 used to drive me nuts with the constant washing machine noises they made

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On 2/23/2018 at 6:16 PM, The-Acre said:

A droning sound especially at around 50mph could well be from a tyre.  I've had this twice and both times it was a tyre out of shape, even though it looked fine tread wise.  It sounded like a bearing or similar but completely went with new tyres.

Hmm... out of shape.... Did you feel any vibrations?

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3 minutes ago, welland said:

Hmm... out of shape.... Did you feel any vibrations?

9 hours ago, rayaans said:

 

 

4 minutes ago, welland said:

Hmm... out of shape.... Did you feel any vibrations?

No, none at all.

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9 hours ago, rayaans said:

Thats a good shout and more likely with a budget tyre

Damn Sunny SN3800 used to drive me nuts with the constant washing machine noises they made

Just popped out to see what was fitted by the last owner.  Three Jinyu and one Azura! This could well be the explanation.  However, all is smooth.   

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24 minutes ago, welland said:

Just popped out to see what was fitted by the last owner.  Three Jinyu and one Azura! This could well be the explanation.  However, all is smooth.   

You will unlikely see any problems visually with out of shape tyres.  Try swapping them from the rear to see if it changes anything.

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1 hour ago, welland said:

Just popped out to see what was fitted by the last owner.  Three Jinyu and one Azura! This could well be the explanation.  However, all is smooth.   

Interesting choice of tyres haha. Have never heard of them but maybe they are to blame

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  • 1 month later...

Hi All,

Time for an update.   I've driven my rx400h to the Alps recently so had plenty of time behind the wheel to make observations.  

Before my trip, I decided to get the tracking laser checked.  Both the front and rear were out of tolerance.  After it had been adjusted, i initially thought the noise had disappeared,  but it hadn't.  However, I am confident that it is better.  There are a number of characteristic sounds:

1) when accelerating from standstill, we're on electric power only and very quiet.

2) when the engine starts providing effort, there is a quiet sort of growling sound.  As speed increases to 25ish mph, this either goes away or becomes inaudible due to road and wind noise.  I'm thinking that this growl is unrelated to the motorway drone.  

3) as speed increases the droning starts around 45mph and gets louder as speed increases.  However, beyond 65mph it disappears and cruising is quiet.  If I lift off the accelerator and slow to 60mph, the noise returns, then disappears below 45ish.  

4) while cruising at 70mph and without the droning sound, I have discovered that slight left turns cause the noise to sound.  This is not only left hand motorway bends, but also the slight left when making adjustments within lane on a straight road.  When returning from left turn to straight ahead, and when turning right, there is no noise.  

This is all still a bit baffling to me.  I'm thinking that there is a possibility of a noisy wheel bearing, but I'm still not ruling out the possibility that tyres are the cause. Think I'll try to swap the wheels around to see if it makes any difference.  

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  • 3 weeks later...

my money is on tyres or wheel bearing good luck finding out which it may be. I'd say replace the tyres first but keep the old ones if they have decent meat left on them to re-use if the noise is still present. Another idea may be to find some very cheap part worn tyres from a decent make and have them fitted (again keep the old ones if they are any good) just to see if the noise goes away.

I've had mystery road speed related noises in cars before and it's a nightmare, my sympathies for you.

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  • 4 months later...

Just thought I'd keep you all posted about this one.  I still have the dronong noise above about 50mph, and most pronounced when turning left.  I swapped the front tyres left to right and this made no difference to the characteristics.  The sound seems louder from the left front.  

So, I have it booked in at the garage to investigate further - I'm thinking wheel bearing is now most likely.  

Has anybody fitted a new front wheel bearing recently on an rx400h?  Is it likely that I will have to get one from lexus, or are alternative ones available from motor factors?  Any idea how much?   

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I have had a similar noise on my car in the past. I was convinced it was a wheel bearing, but turned out to be the front Bridgestone tyres. There were no signs of uneven ware, and the tyres still had over 5 mm of tread left, but changing them removed the noise.

John. 

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1 hour ago, Britprius said:

I have had a similar noise on my car in the past. I was convinced it was a wheel bearing, but turned out to be the front Bridgestone tyres. There were no signs of uneven ware, and the tyres still had over 5 mm of tread left, but changing them removed the noise.

John. 

Your experience sounds strange to me - with Bridgestone being a respected brand. 

Do you think you had a tyre/ tyres from a bad batch,  or were they visibly damaged somehow?

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20 hours ago, welland said:

Your experience sounds strange to me - with Bridgestone being a respected brand. 

Do you think you had a tyre/ tyres from a bad batch,  or were they visibly damaged somehow?

There was no visible damage or odd ware pattern. The tyres Bridgestone Ecopia had done about 12,000 miles when I first began to hear the noise. I replaced them with a set of Hankook's, and I was really impressed with there performance, and longevity lasting 35000 miles before a piece of steel on the motorway damaged two of the I am sure they would have gone t 40000 miles. I had all four replaced with a set of Goodyear efficientgrip performance tyres. The were quiet, and handled well but life was short at only 18000 miles.

John.

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On 2/24/2018 at 10:02 PM, welland said:

Just popped out to see what was fitted by the last owner.  Three Jinyu and one Azura! This could well be the explanation.  However, all is smooth.

What miles have they done and what year of manufacture? I would swap for a decent set of mid range or premium tyres as soon as you can. plenty of recommendation on here.

Dave

 

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On 2/24/2018 at 10:02 PM, welland said:

Just popped out to see what was fitted by the last owner.  Three Jinyu and one Azura! This could well be the explanation.  However, all is smooth.   

That car sounds like "fun" in the wet!  I would just ditch them anyway because they are cheap Chinese :censored:.  The noise is probably being generated by the interaction between the tread pattern and the road surface as the wheels rotate hence why it only happens at certain speeds and when you go fast enough the noise disappears.  If the car has been MOT'd recently then any play in the wheel bearings should have been noted although if you had it done 11 months ago and you've done a load of mileage since then then it might not have been.

If the tyres are directional then you shouldn't be swapping left to right either but I don't know if yours are or not.

Edited by ColinBarber
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  • 2 weeks later...
On 9/26/2018 at 1:39 PM, Rutlandlex said:

That car sounds like "fun" in the wet!  I would just ditch them anyway because they are cheap Chinese :censored:.  The noise is probably being generated by the interaction between the tread pattern and the road surface as the wheels rotate hence why it only happens at certain speeds and when you go fast enough the noise disappears.  If the car has been MOT'd recently then any play in the wheel bearings should have been noted although if you had it done 11 months ago and you've done a load of mileage since then then it might not have been.

If the tyres are directional then you shouldn't be swapping left to right either but I don't know if yours are or not.

Does a noisy wheel bearing always have noticeable play when the wheel is manhandled on a ramp?

I did check the tyres for directional rotation, but there are no such constraints on mine.  

The noise seems loudest on the NSF, so I have now fitted the spare wheel there as a further test.  The spare has a pirelli tyre with reasonable depth of tread remaining, but this didn't make any noticeable difference to the noise either.  

I have the car booked in for examination at my garage.  

Aside froom tyres and wheel bearings, what else might make such a  droning noise, which is apparent only at certain speeds and when the steering is at a certain position?  CV joint? There are not many candidates for the cause, as far as I can see.  

 

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My car has similar droning noises at certain speeds and when I bought it from Lexus Derby it had a pair of brand new Azura tyres on the front (what a surprise). Original Dunlops on rear. I am convinced that it's tyre noise. I'm changing to  set of Michelin Cross Climates in the next few weeks so will report back when they are on. 

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5 hours ago, olliesgrandad said:

My car has similar droning noises at certain speeds and when I bought it from Lexus Derby it had a pair of brand new Azura tyres on the front (what a surprise). Original Dunlops on rear. I am convinced that it's tyre noise. I'm changing to  set of Michelin Cross Climates in the next few weeks so will report back when they are on. 

Thanks, that would be very interesting.   Have you thought about swapping the Dunlops to the front as an experiment? 

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