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-   -   Bushings (http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/tech-help/22144-bushings.html)

David C Klasse 08-15-2001 08:36 PM

Bushings
 
How do I check the quality of the bushings? :confused:
What are the purpose of bushings? :confused:
And what are the symptoms of worn bushings? :confused:

Thanks!! :rolleyes: :confused: :eek: :D

David C Klasse 08-16-2001 12:24 AM

Hmmm, no response?! But I got the following e-mail.... J.Hidalgo....!

"Hello David C Klasse,

J.HIDALGO has just replied to a thread you have subscribed to entitled - Bushings - in the Tech Help forum of ShopForum.

This thread is located at:
http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/tech-help/22144-bushings.html

There may be other replies also, but you will not receive any more notifications until you visit the board again.

Yours,
ShopForum team"

?!

stevebfl 08-16-2001 08:19 AM

I shall presume you are referring to suspension bushings.

They may be more complicated than they look. The first concept with a bushing is its ability to act as a pivot point. Other pivot points include: ball and socket and trunnion/shaft arrangements. The ball and socket are obvious, and trunnions are for the 108 crowd, but bushings are much of what we currently use.

The suspension link will need to pivot on the attaching axis. The link is steel or aluminum and the bushing will be pressed in. (sometimes made in). The typical bushing is a steel inner cylinder surrounded by the rubber which is encased in the second steel cylinder. The outer is pressed into the link and the inner is pinched hard by the attaching hardware. The ABILITY to pivot is totally in the flexibility of the rubber as all metal components are FIXED. Think about this. The metal inner hole does NOT move, as it is firmly attached to the frame (etc.).

The reason they use this method of pivoting and not ball joints or trunnions is partially cost but mostly for noise dampening. All the road noise coming through the suspension has to be dampened in the subframe or your posterior. The noise from different aggregate pavement and tire noise is the level of dampening to be dealt with. Many of your suspension upgrades include some form of stiffening to the bushing or replacement with ball joint type pivots. The point is to limit the alignment change that occur during heavy loading due to the flexing of the rubber pivot (bushing).

The problem with the hard plastic bushings is that they have no way of performing the flexible pivot function and wind up squeaking and knocking during flexing. Hime type joint (ball joints) provide and excellent suspension for racing but let all the road and tire noise through. It is a design question best left to MB IMHO.

David C Klasse 08-24-2001 07:11 PM

What is the average cost for replacement? Thanks.

One more thing... my car feels less stable at higher speeds. When flooring it, and car shifts from 2-3 at about 60 mph, car feels squirrelly. Also, that popping sound I get when accelerating.
Are these symptoms of worn bushings?

(Thanks again Steve for the explanation.)


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