Normally this is a tire out of balance. Have your tires rotated and balanced.
Q is traveling at 50 mph. You are Driver Z, passing Driver Q at 60 mph. When is it safe to pull back in front of Driver Q? When To Pass Driver QQ is traveling at 50 mph. You are Driver Z, passing Driver Q at 60 mph. When is it safe to pull back in front of Driver Q? Q is traveling at 50 mph. You are Driver Z, passing Driver Q at 60 mph. When is it safe to pull back in front of Driver Q? Q is traveling at 50 mph. You are Driver Z, passing Driver Q at 60 mph. When is it safe to pull back in front of Driver Q?Q is traveling at 50 mph. You are Driver Z, passing Driver Q at 60 mph. When is it safe to pull back in front of Driver Q? darielstanley1926@gmail.comQ is traveling at 50 mph. You are Driver Z, passing Driver Q at 60 mph. When is it safe to pull back in front of Driver Q?ou are Driver Z, passing Driver Q at 60 mph. When is it safe to pull back in front of Driver Q? It is generally not safe to try to pass another vehicle and then immediately pull in front of them, especially if you are traveling significantly faster than the other driver. Doing so can cause a collision if the other driver is not expecting it, or if they are unable to slow down in time to avoid you. It is important to always use caution when passing another vehicle and to make sure that you have plenty of space and time to complete the maneuver safely. This means waiting until you can see that you have a clear path ahead and that it is safe to pull in front of the other vehicle before you do so. In this situation, it would be best to wait until you have a significant distance between you and Driver Q before attempting to pull back in front of them. This will give you time to safely merge back into the lane and ensure that you are not cutting off the other driver
usually steering shakes over 60 mph is due to front tires needing to be balanced unless you have something more serious going on.
Tires may need to be balanced.
Is based on vehicle weight and road conditions. you also have to figure in the reaction time of the driver, condition of the brakes, tires, and vehicle overall. however you can figure that at 60 mph a vehicle will travel one mile per minute
Take it in for a front end alignment, that should calm it down or it could be the tie rods hope that helps
E. Enserink has written: 'Impact test of compact vehicle with modified side structure, 25 mph, 60' 'Impact test of compact vehicle with modified side structure, 35 mph, 90' 'Impact test of compact vehicle with modified side structure, 35 mph, 60'
Depends on what vehicle you are driving. The average car stopping distance including reaction time at 60 mph is about 275 feet.
It depends upon how fast the vehicle is moving. a vehicle driving at an average speed of 60 mph would be approximately one mile per minute, therefore, the time to reach 415 miles at 60 mph would be 415 minutes, which is 6.92 hours, or roughly 7 hours of nonstop driving at 60 mph. all it takes is a little math.
It will have travelled 4*60 = 240 miles
I would check tire balance and check for warped rotors, first. Check tires for blisters and check the steering linkage for worn parts.
possibilityThe car is out of alignment or you have a wheel out of balance.
buy a new car!