Plymouth Acclaims are notorious for this. Underneath the car there is an anti-sway bar that runs between the back wheels. Surrounding the bar is a u-shaped channel. Where the bar passes through the channel at each end, there is supposed to be a weld, but it was poorly designed and the welds eventually break, resulting in a horrifying clunk every time you hit a bump and the bar hits the channel. There are two ways to resolve this: Pay the dealer $400 to install a new bar and channel assembly (which will break eventually), or pay your local muffler shop $20 to weld a couple of pieces of scrap metal between the bar and the channel to keep it from moving. Problem solved.
chiken
well it depends on how good ur car is and its condition just dont hit a bump to hard or something may fall out
the spare tyre.
A restricted exhaust, possibly a plugged cataylitic converter.
Sound is generated from a speaker through the vibrations of an electromagnet attached to a diaphragm. The electrical signal from an audio source causes the diaphragm to move back and forth, creating sound waves that travel through the air and are heard as sound.
Yes, it is the transition from subsonic to supersonic and then back that causes the sound.
Chain alignment is off between the freewheel and front chainring. Also check chain tension when installing the back wheel.
You are saying that on a smooth flat road driving in a straight line you are hearing a clunking sound? Is that coming from the front or back? Does the clunk happen just once or is there a frequency? If it happens more than once, does it change with vehicle speed?
this is me,get back and other songs but i forgot the names sorry i am very sorry
When a sound wave hits an object, it causes the object to vibrate at the same frequency as the sound wave. This can sometimes be seen as the object physically moving, especially if the sound wave has a high intensity or frequency.
a hammer on the back of it hits the bullet very hard and sends it out through the barrel it hits it so hard it makes a big sound!!! the sound kinda sounds like............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................poo!
A reflection of sound waves can be heard by an observer when the sound waves bounce off a surface and propagate back towards the listener. This causes a delay in the arrival time of the sound to the listener's ears, creating an echo effect.