Hi all,
I picked up my 2.2 DTi Elite on Saturday but I have found the handling to be odd on roads anything less than smooth and neutral camber. Now, I can't believe that a modern large car follows road dips and bumps more than my FWD Honda or RWD TVR. Sometimes the whole car feels like it steps sideways, if that makes any sense. Mostly, though, it just needs quite a bit of work keeping it straight.
I had the tracking checked at a local tyre / exhaust place using laser equipment.
What we found was:
- the actual tracking seems fine
- all the tyres are low and need replacing ideally
- the rear drivers wheel is smooth on the inside (I knew about this)
- the rear passenger side wheel seems to be either further out or further in than the rear driver side wheel - the laser showed a difference of about 3 points on the gauge on this wheel. The garage chap didn't know why this would be.
So.....
Q1 - How nervous are Omegas on bumpy roads?
Q2 - It can't be normal to have a rear wheel further out or in compared to the other rear wheel. Has anyone had this?
Q3 - Could the rear wheel have some kind of wrongly applied spacer? It has the normal Elite wheels.
Q4 - Could the tyres being relatively low, and the smooth inside of the driver's rear wheel, cause somewhat floaty and wayward handling seeing the tracking is OK?
I tested 3 Omegas before testing this DTi. None of them felt like this, though one test drive was very short on smooth(ish) roads, another was of an MV6 (different suspension) on smooth roads and the other was a 2.5 V6 for about 10 minutes, again on smoothish roads. The MV6 felt very planted and easy to place where I wanted it. When I test drove the DTi, it seemed to pull to the left which we put down to the camber of the road. I had an inspection done to check this before buying but it turned out the garage didn't actually have alignment tools and he took it on various roads and concluded it was the camber of the roads.
I'm having the tyres changed this week so I will know whether it is them causing the symptoms and go from there. However, I'd rather get a few more miles out of them if the Omega is, actually, a floaty car. I just can't think that it would be quite so poor. I suppose I ought to take it to a Vauxhall dealer and get the whole suspension geometry looked at and set up but I really don't want to be ripped off quite yet.
Sorry for the rambling post.
Cheers for any help.

Graham