The steering joints and connections are worn and need replacing Actually, the most likely problem is the tires. They may just need balancing. Sometimes the belts in the tires separate which causes a wobble. high/low spots in tires also causes a wobble. A bent rim can cause a wobble. Excessive negative caster will cause a wobble (alignment issue). Steering joints (inner and outer tie rods will not cause a wobble)
Worn-out ball joints in the steering linkage or suspension. This allows the steering angle between the wheels to vary, causing them to wobble.
Many different possibilities. Start with Steering Stabilizer and steering components. A bad coil can also cause the wobble. sometimes if the casters are at the wrong angles on the arms it can cause a wobble. Sure replacing the bushings, steering stabilizer and improving the suspension will help. . .but that is not where the problem lies. Take a look at the power steering motor itself, you'll notice that the BEARING in the steering shaft that connects to the pit-man arm wobbles due to the constant force from turning left and right left and right all the time. this is due to the wear and tear of the steering motor. Jack up the cart get underneath and as someone turns the wheels left and right watch the shaft wobble. THIS IS YOUR PROBLEM! You must replace the steering motor! Any loose suspension or steering component, a worn/weak steering dampener (shock), and the tires themselves can cause "death wobble".
Loose lug nuts on the tires. Better check them immediately and tighten them if they are loose. Otherwise, you could lose a tire while driving and have a terrible accident.
Cause th3re corners
It is usually caused by either a bad tire, or loose steering components.
Tire out of balance, worn suspension parts, defective or loose wheel bearing, loose lug-nuts, or worn steering parts.
Could be your tires need balancing, or you need an alignment. The faster you go, the more it's going to wobble.
Check the steering arms, the tie rod ends, and the ball joints for wear. Any of these will cause the problem.
Could be you are low on Power Steering Fluid. My 97 Villager seems to need it every 6-7 months. My van will make noises around corners (or hard steering) even if the level is "full". I fill it to the top and all the noises go away (at least for 6-7 months).
Check your sway bar rubbers in the front, there are 4 of them and they will cause a bumping and banging noise around corners and over bumps.
you could have a broken steel belt in one of your tires, that happened to me. I had a tear in my right tire that caused that in my 91 Roadmaster.