my MY96 850 (B2525S (NA), manual transmission FWD) has been juddering for at least a year now. It happens mainly under light-medium braking. The frequency of the judder ist speed dependent, its starts to get really bad from 70 mph upwards, but you can feel it at all speeds. Under hard braking the judder gets less or is even gone completely. You can also feel the judder in the steering wheel as a left-right movement.
I suspected warped brake discs for a long time, but did not bother to change them as they were new when I bought the car (and money is a constraint).
Also, seemingly unrelated, in 1st and 2nd gear the car judders forth and back while acclerating smoothly or coasting at very low speeds/low rpm. The clutch is still ok, I know that because I had to replace the RMS seal a year ago (and silly me didnt replace the clutch, because I didnt knowI could do that all in one go .. *facepalm*).
Yesterday when I changed my tyres I noticed the front-right outer CV joint boot is torn and it has already flung out some of the grease. It wasn't torn last time i checked (around 2-3 months ago welding the exhaust pipe).
Now the car has also some front-right damage history.. i bought it with a bent fender, somebody probably hit a pole while parking. The car was driving to the right, i had to hold the steering wheel some 45° to the left to go straight. I had the suspension checked by a Volvo mechanic with good reputation a year ago and they didnt notice anything (although I myself wont go there anymore.. they overcharged me grossly on brake fluid and the overall experience wasn't so well, since they didn't find any problem and had no suggestion what to do about it).
The suspension was also aligned very well (different shop, I have the printout before/after) but it will still go slightly to the right, steering wheel is about 15°-20° to the left when going straight.
Now that juddering from braking wasn't there when I bought the car, it developed later. I cannot pinpoint that unfortunately, but it coincides with me driving the car into a ditch... with the right hand side of course. Wasn't so bad, nothing obviously cracked, bent, failed and the car didnt drive any more crooked than it had before. But I did hit the bottom of the ditch with the front right wheel, not too bad because most the car's weight was supported by the cars underfloor (but the right wheel was locked in place, diff sent all power to the left wheel which was freewheeling).
Now that the CV boot is gone anyway I want to repair that suspension for good. I want to leave out changing the brake discs first, I don't think they are the culprits (no juddering under hard braking, also they have been checked and bled properly).
I read that if the outer CV joint is gone, you can feel it in the steering. I have to check that, but I don't really remember juddering/clunking while cornering.
Haynes manual says, juddering under acceleration/coasting comes from worn INNER CV joints - can that be confirmed?
I also read here in the forums that a bent tie rod could be the culprit. I heard the mechanic who aligned the car mumble about that, too. He wasn't sure why the car is still turning to the left, so he mentioned "maybe a bent tie rod butnotsuregottagetbacktowork". EDIT: Maybe he was talking about the steering rod? I'm not sure anymore..
Soooo... what I couldn't find is how to check CV joints. Can that only be done while driving and "feeling" the symptoms or can you crawl under the car and "jiggle" them to see whats up? Can one feel a worn out CV joint like you can feel a worn out bearing? If so, how to "jiggle" it to feel that?
The tie rod never looked like it was obviously bent, but maybe the heads crooked or something. A new replacement tie rod is cheap, I'm willing to change it alongside the CV boot anyway (the shop says "tie rod head", translated from german. Theres a photograph- is that the "whole" tie rod?).
Whats the best way to handle that - just get a complete replacement right hand axle with both CV joints (with my financial situation, I'll tear one out of a scrapyard-car)? Or try my luck with replacing one of the CV joints, tie rod, or whatever part I didnt think of yet?
Ah, another hint: The tyres don't seem to have any different left-right wear pattern. Can some parts be exluded from the list of suspects because of this?
Sorry for the long rant. I have been thinking alot about this lately, as I am at the verge of either repairing the car (if possible) or selling it otherwise. I love the car. But the above conglomerate of problems, which seem very related, is making me pull my hairs by now. I have spent many relaxing nights in that car in many different countries, and I would like to keep it indefinitely. Theres no corrosion anywhere and the engine is in perfect condition. It has only 185k miles on it now






