4wheelpilot
Active Member
I'm frustrated or you.This is the information I've shared elsewhere for general car support:
2018 Kia Stinger GT1 AWD
So far I've done the following:
Characteristics:
- Road Force Balance the original OEM Wheels (Bridgestone Potenza RE97AS-02, 225/45-R18
- Purchased new tires and have all Road Force balanced on install. (Michelin Pilot Sport 3+ A/S, 225/45-R18)
Of note: the Vibration is really quite low in intensity. I would almost suggest that many people wouldn't be bothered by it. The only reason it bothers me/that I notice is that A) I have never had a car do this before, B) It comes and goes so I am unable to just "get used to it"/"have it fade away into the background", and C)Every review touted how this car was more "Grand Touring" than "Sport", but issues like this eat into that.
- Vibration has an audible component - it can usually be heard - sometimes more than it can be felt
- This has two components. For the very first drive of most mornings it creates almost a resonant "hum" that I can "feel" in my ears. This never lasts long and may be unrelated. Otherwise it is just a sound that seems in sync with the vibration frequency
- With the Michelin noise characteristics, the once per tire revolution sound component seems slightly more pronounced. Unsure if this is an issue with the new tires or a result of the general road noise level going down with the Michelins (so that other noises are more regularly heard)
- Vibration is usually felt in multiple parts of the car, but more commonly the seat/body
- The issue is 100% related to the frequency/rpm of the wheels. I have used a vibration monitoring app on a couple of occasions and run FFTs on the results to show that the primary spikes are at the First and Second order harmonics for the wheel rotation speed.
- I haven't done many tests, but the Second order harmonic is often similar in amplitude to the first and is occasionally larger.
- Vibration is speed dependent to an extent. It can be felt most strongly at 45mph and again at 60+mph. In between and before are much less noticeable.
- Vibration comes and goes (unrelated to speed)
- Usually worse in the morning/first drive of the day (had assumed this would implicate tires)
- Can go away for stretches and have a pretty smooth ride - but then come back
Spending money hoping for improvement and not getting it is tough.
I also have a GT1 and haven't noticed anything "excessive" regarding vibrations nor noise.
What may be helpful is test driving other GT1s (at dealership or another owner's GT1 if you have somebody nearby).
This way you can get a better idea if it's just your GT1 or all GT1s.
I'm switching out to Michelin PS A/s 3+ tomorrow for better handling.