Nefarious wrote: Tue Apr 24, 2018 7:17 am The funny thing is, I've been intermittently been using the TVR for longer journeys as the currently most reliable car in the fleet!

Nefarious wrote: Tue Apr 24, 2018 7:17 am The funny thing is, I've been intermittently been using the TVR for longer journeys as the currently most reliable car in the fleet!
Ah OK, is that something that would fail over time or could a pothole cause it? It came on quite suddenly is the reason I'm asking.
I dunno, the garage said the brakes were fine so I'm assuming not.Swervin_Mervin wrote: Thu Apr 26, 2018 12:16 pm Definitely not pad deposits? Would seem more likely than a balljoint, esp at that age.
This is normal, all mine and my dads BMWs with auto lights have put them on in bright sunlight. I looked into it and found it was a safety thing.Sundayjumper wrote: Fri Apr 20, 2018 3:28 pm The BMW's auto headlights seem overly keen to switch on and stay on. Driving to work this morning, bright sunshine, the lights stayed on all the way.
Yes, I could have turned them off, but I was curious to see if/when the car would figure it out. It didn't.
Then it worked fine (i.e. they stayed off) when I went out for lunch.
(this is separate to the DRLs)
Tried the big hard stops earlier and the vibration has increased significantly. I don’t have any equipment to look at bits myself so I’ll have to get it booked in again.Nefarious wrote: Fri Apr 27, 2018 8:02 am If you think it's pad deposits, go and give it a couple of big hard stops (after warming up the brakes first, or course) and see if it improves. I had assumed when you said the garage had checked, we had already ruled out pads/discs/caliper mounts.
And yes, ball joint-based vibration can come on quite quickly. Get the front end in the air and go over the major suspension joints with a tommy bar and see if you can find any movement.
Don't be a numpty. It's obviously chassis rust.