www.03msp.com
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- 2004 Acura TL
Everyone,
Good morning! I swear I've searched and searched and could not find anything so, here it goes.
I had the 156E rear bushings put on a few months ago to solve the rear clunk problem. However, lately here in Illinois it has gotten much warmer out.
I noticed that upon stop and go traffic, a noise had developed from the rear of the car. It didn't quite sound like a "crunch" but definitely sounded like a rubbing or compression type sound.
After spending a few minutes with Bijou-MP5 while I was under the car, we noticed the sound was the 156E bushings on the sway bar. What happened as the rear of the car compressed (went up and down) with the force of stop and go traffic, the sway bar would rotate about 1/8" or so. This force, on the already tight-attatched-bushings made the sound that resonated across the bar. In all my years working on cars with suspension, you would of thought that Mazda/Dealership would have put some suspension grease on the bushings. Well, they didn't.
The following day I had jacked the car up, unbolted the four bolts, pulled off the brackets, pulled out the bushings, lubed them back up and reassembled.
Sound is gone.
Just thought I'd share it with you as some of you may experience this shortly with the weather changes as well.
- Brian
Good morning! I swear I've searched and searched and could not find anything so, here it goes.
I had the 156E rear bushings put on a few months ago to solve the rear clunk problem. However, lately here in Illinois it has gotten much warmer out.
I noticed that upon stop and go traffic, a noise had developed from the rear of the car. It didn't quite sound like a "crunch" but definitely sounded like a rubbing or compression type sound.
After spending a few minutes with Bijou-MP5 while I was under the car, we noticed the sound was the 156E bushings on the sway bar. What happened as the rear of the car compressed (went up and down) with the force of stop and go traffic, the sway bar would rotate about 1/8" or so. This force, on the already tight-attatched-bushings made the sound that resonated across the bar. In all my years working on cars with suspension, you would of thought that Mazda/Dealership would have put some suspension grease on the bushings. Well, they didn't.
The following day I had jacked the car up, unbolted the four bolts, pulled off the brackets, pulled out the bushings, lubed them back up and reassembled.
Sound is gone.
Just thought I'd share it with you as some of you may experience this shortly with the weather changes as well.
- Brian