You can remove it, but I would try to apply a lot of WD40 into the stabilizer bushings and see if the squeak goes away. It looks dry in the photo. I had that issue on my 69 and it worked for me. The same with my control arm bushings.I know I could do a full-on front end rebuild and this would probably go away, but I'd feel like an idiot if I didn't figure out what has failed first.
Certainly worth a try to spray lube things one by one just to sleuth out what is making the noise.You can remove it, but I would try to apply a lot of WD40 into the stabilizer bushings and see if the squeak goes away. It looks dry in the photo. I had that issue on my 69 and it worked for me. The same with my control arm bushings.
"rare parts" makes them. O'reilly & napa "carry" them, and that means special order. but i'd hazard a guess that they're made in the same place the moog's are and just reboxed.Those tubular UCAs are cool, but a bit pricey. Maybe some day.
Does anybody else make offset UCA bushings? I’ve heard great things about the Moog K7103 for years - nobody has copied it or improved on it?
I'll never understand why people just throw diagnostics to the wind. Makes absolutely zero sense. Good luck with it.
Diagnostic is not a double effort. It is part of the job. Let's say for example, instead of the pop originating from any of the front suspension or steering parts that you have a crack somewhere in the attaching part of a frame rail or control arm ear. Every time the wheel is turned, it flexes that area and pops. I think that's unlikely, but I'm just throwing a "what if" out there. After doing all this work "what if" something like that is the case? You'll still have the issue. Without diagnostics, you have not 100% verified the problem. Have fun. I'm out.Not really what is happening here. This car is a little sloppy and needs a front end rebuild regardless -- the noise is just the catalyst to get me to do it. I will certainly find the diagnosis along the way, but why double my efforts?
Just to add to your comment Rusty, I once had a crack at the upper control arm bracket, attached to the frame that needed welding back on. Diagnose before fixing.Diagnostic is not a double effort. It is part of the job. Let's say for example, instead of the pop originating from any of the front suspension or steering parts that you have a crack somewhere in the attaching part of a frame rail or control arm ear. Every time the wheel is turned, it flexes that area and pops. I think that's unlikely, but I'm just throwing a "what if" out there. After doing all this work "what if" something like that is the case? You'll still have the issue. Without diagnostics, you have not 100% verified the problem. Have fun. I'm out.
VHT rollbar & chassis black lays down super nice and dries fast. same with duplicolor engine enamel. i've tried the "raptor" chassis paint, and it's good: meets all the criteria: self priming, heat/uv, abrasion, tough, etc, etc. but it sprays *** and the coverage sucks per can.Thanks in advance.
- What's a good rattle-can option for priming and painting suspension parts (LCA, UCA)?
- Do people use Loctite red or blue when assembling all this stuff? Or is it fine to just torque everything to FSM spec?