yes, it does. Once the outer tie rod is loose or damage the wheel automatically lose strength and start shaking.
Yes. So could a broken belt in your tire, a tire out of balance, loose lug nuts, bad CV joint.
Yes, replace tie rod and have the car realigned.
Your tie-rod ends or ball joints are probably badly worn. Or it could just be air friction pushing your car to one side.....
bad/worn out rod bearings.Lack of oil.Lack of oil & filter changes.Incorrect oil.Over revving.
You might want to check your front wheel bearings. If they are bad there will be a noise and it will also cause the car to shimmy. Also tie rod ends.
something wrong there better have it looked at could be a tie rod end a ball joint or a bent wheel
Tires,inner tie rod bushings, if the steering wheel shakes when brakes are applied - brake rotors warped.
when you rod it around town. that's hard on motors sto don't do it
Bad shocks, worn ball joints, worn tie rod ends - all cause tire wear.
No. It is very unlikely that pushing a car would cause a failure later.
Having a bad rod bearing could cause a truck to make a loud knocking noise and shake when driving at high speeds. The engine having a coolant leak or an engine timing problem could also cause the knocking noise.
There are a number of things that I know of that can cause this one. First off did you have an alignment done after replacing the tires? I would also suggest checking out your front end ie ball joints, tie rod ends, wheel bearings and so on. Good luck