Kit Includes: (2) Front Sway Bar Links (2) Front Strut & Spring Assemblies
Specification
Location
Front
TRQ suspension kits are manufactured using premium raw materials and coatings for extended service life. Each TRQ suspension component is designed to be a direct, maintenance-free replacement to the stock unit. To extend the life of your steering and suspension components, TRQ recommends replacing components in pairs, sets, or kits. All products are fit and road-tested in our Massachusetts R&D facility to ensure we deliver on our promise of Trusted Reliable Quality.
Product Features
Application Specific Design: No modifications necessary
Anti-Corrosion Coated: Enhanced surface life
Pre-greased: No additional maintenance required
Kitted for Restored Performance: Improved road-feel and handling
Replacing struts used to require specialized tools to compress, remove, and transfer the old spring and mount. Our Pre-assembled, complete strut & spring assemblies come with all new parts and make the job much quicker and easier for the do-it-yourself mechanic.
Strut & spring assembly contains:
Upper Strut Mount
Strut Bearing
Coil Spring
Boot & Bumper Kit
Gas-charged Strut
Our steering and suspension components are pre-greased and sealed for long life and do not require the extra maintenance typically required by greaseable versions.
Item Condition:New
Attention California Customers:
WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals including Lead and Lead Compounds, which are known to the State of California to cause cancer, and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information, go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.
Lifetime Warranty
This item is backed by our limited lifetime warranty. In the event that this item should fail due to manufacturing defects during intended use, we will replace the part free of charge. This warranty covers the cost of the part only.
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How To Install Front Sway Stabilizer Links 1995-2005 Pontiac Sunfire
How to Replace Strut Assembly 2000-05 Chevy Cavalier
Created on:
Tools used
Torque Wrench
Complete Metric Wrench Set
Complete Metric Socket Set
1. Raise and secure the vehicle
Lift and secure your vehicle with its model specific safe support points.
Make sure your jack stands are set and the correct height on an even surface and your e brake is on if all four wheels aren’t off the ground.
2. Remove the stabilizer link
Use a wrench to secure the top of the link and a socket and breaker bar on the bottom.
Remove the stabilizer link.
3. install the new stabilizer link
Thread the stabilizer link, bushings and washers into the control arm and sway bar.
Use your wrench to secure the link and a socket and ratchet to tighten it up.
The torque spec is 13 foot lbs.
Brought to you by 1A Auto.com. Your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the internet. Hi, I'm Mike Green. I'm one of the owners of 1A Auto. I want to help you save time and money repairing and maintaining your vehicle. I'm going to use my 20 plus years experience restoring and repairing cars and trucks like this to show you the correct way to install parts from 1AAuto.com. The right parts, installed correctly. That's going to save you time and money. Thank you, and enjoy the video.
In this video we'll be showing you how to replace a stabilizer link on this 1997 Pontiac Sunfire. Basically the same as any '95 to '05 Cavalier and very similar to a lot of GM front stabilizer links. All you'll need is a couple wrenches and wrench size will vary. Okay sway bar links on the Sunfire Cavalier. Obviously you want to raise and support your vehicle, and you want to raise the front wheels off the ground evenly. You don't want to just put the left wheel up in the air or the right wheel up in the air, because the stabilizer bar is designed to act against that. So you'll actually just make it more difficult for yourself to take it apart. So when you raise the vehicle, on these vehicles you probably want to place the jack right here on this pinch weld behind the front wheel. You can raise it here and then support it here, and then raise the other side and do the same thing. Okay so here we are under the vehicle. We're looking towards the front of the car. Here's your stabilizer link, you can see these have been replaced recently.
So I'm just going to show you how to take them out and put them in. What can happen on these is these rubber bushings can wear out and then you have a metal on metal, or metal on metal down here. Also, what can happen is these studs can rust and just break. Some symptoms of your sway bar links being broken is your car will lean more in turns, and also another symptom if one of these bushings wears out, you'll hear a clanging when you go over bumps when your car is straight, but then if you're turning and you hit a bump you may not hear the clang because the sway bar will be counteracting the turn and just pulling itself tight against the metal. So these replacement sway bar, these replacement links are 9/16ths. Probably the originals are 13 millimeters. But it's pretty easy. You just want to get under here. Most likely if you have your originals on here, once you start doing this they're probably going to break. You just remove this bolt, you need to hold this nut with a wrench. So there's your link out. So when you put the link back in, you want to put a washer on, and then a bushing, and then you put the stud up through the control arm.
You put the bushing on with these stepped sides go into the holes. So it goes into that hole there. You can see here that stepped side goes into the hole in all cases. Whenever the bushing's against metal, you want them in the hole like that. So we have a bushing, put that up through. Now we need a washer. Then after the washer, there's a spacer. Then another washer. Then a bushing, and again the stepped side goes up into the stabilizer bar. Then a bushing on the other end, with the stepped side going down into the stabilizer bar. And then a washer. Generally these washers are just a little bit dished to hold the, actually they look pretty flat. They're a little dished to hold the bushing kind of within itself. They squeeze together. This is a lock nut so it's only going to thread on a little ways at first, and then you're going to get some resistance. Take your wrench, and hold. Torque specs on this is 13 foot pounds, so it doesn't have to be too tight. But what I like to do is kind of go slow at first. Make sure everything gets seated correctly. Make sure all these bushings are going where they need to go. Go a little further. Basically this goes all the way, the bolt goes all the way until it bottoms out. And that's basically it.
We hope this helps you out. Brought to you by www.1AAuto.com. Your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the internet. Please feel free to call us toll free 888-844-3393. We're the company that's here for you on the internet and in person.
Tools used
1/2 Inch Breaker Bar
Socket Extensions
13mm Socket
10mm Socket
18mm Socket
Pry Bar
Jack Stands
Ratchet
19mm Socket
Floor Jack
1. Remove the wheel
Loosen the lug nuts
Raise and secure the vehicle
Remove the lug nuts and wheel.
2. Remove the bottom of the shock
Unbolt the two bottom bolts securing the shock.
Use a breaker bar and a 21 mm socket and some penetrating oil.
You might need a hammer to work the bolts out once you have removed the nuts.
Use a pry bar to pry the spindle free from the strut
3. Remove the top of the strut
Pop the hood and secure it.
Use your 13 mm socket and ratchet and some penetrating oil to remove the three bolts securing the top of the strut.
Pull the strut down and out.
4. Install the new strut
Work the strut into place and bolt in the top three 13 mm bolts
Torque the three 13 mm nuts to 35 ft lbs
Bolt in the bottom two nuts and bolts and torque to 100 ft lbs.
5. Replace the wheel
Put the wheel back on and hand tighten the lug nuts
Lower the vehicle and torque the lug nuts to 90 ft lbs
Brought to you by 1AAuto.com, your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the Internet. Hi, I'm Don from 1A Auto. I hope this how-to video helps you out, and next time you need parts for your vehicle, think of 1AAuto.com. Thanks.
In this video, we are going to show you how to replace the front-strut assembly on a 2000 Chevy Cavalier. It's fundamentally the same operation for 2000 through 2005, and it is the exact same in terms of the tools and the strut you'll need from the left side to the right side. To perform this repair, you're going to need new struts from 1A Auto, a jack and jack stands, 21-, 19-, and 13-millimeter sockets and socket wrench, a breaker bar and pipe for extra leverage if needed as well as a pry bar.
Take a 19-millimeter socket and by hand, remove the lug nut caps that are attached to the hubcap, and once you've done that, pull your hubcap off. And if you don't have the benefit of air tools, you'll want to start with your vehicle on the ground, loosen the lug nuts first, then raise and secure the vehicle and then remove the lug nuts, wheel, and tire. There are two nuts on the ends of bolts that go through the spindle. Turn the whole spindle assembly to get better access. We're going to use some oil and spray down those two nuts on the end of the strut assembly just to make it easier for them to come off. Using a 21-millimeter socket and a breaker bar and a pipe for extra leverage, I'm going to break those nuts free on both the top and the bottom. And once I've got those nuts loose, I'm going to use a ratchet to make it faster for me to get those off. I'll fast-forward as I take those two nuts off. I'm going to use a hammer, and I'm going to tap out the bolts that go through. Be sure not to hit too hard or to hit the threads because you don't want to have a hard time putting the nut back on. Use a pry bar or a long screwdriver to pull apart the lower strut and the spindle.
In the engine compartment on the top of the strut tower, you're going to find three 13-millimeter fasteners, two nuts, and one bolt. I'm using a socket wrench with a 13-millimeter socket on it to remove those, and I'll fast-forward as I take those out. Now with the strut assembly totally loose, I'm going to go from the bottom and wiggle it a little bit and give it a tug to the left or back, and it should pop right out. And here you see a side-by-side, old part, new part, direct replacement fit from 1A Auto. Going in with the strut, I'm going to line up the hole for the two posts that go through. And once I got that kind of set in place, I'm going to let it hang there for a second. And then holding it from the bottom, keeping it in place, I'm going to tap on it with a hammer to get the two studs that go through the bracket on the top of the strut tower. If you have cruise control, that's where it mounts, and the bracket goes around those two studs. And then from the bottom I'm just going to twist it so it all lines up. And then I'm going to tighten down on the two 13-millimeter nuts as well as the one bolt that goes through the center there. And I will go ahead and fast-forward as I put those back in.
Now that the upper strut is tight, I'm going to fit into the spindle at the bottom, and I'm going to reinstall the two bolts, and they have a bit of a spline to them. So I'm going to use a hammer and hit them in to seat them once I've got them both in. And once I got those seated, I will reinstall the 21-millimeter nuts that go on the ends, and I will fast-forward as I tighten those up. Now with those two tight, I'm going to go ahead and torque them to 100 foot pounds. You can reinstall your wheel at this point and get the five lug nuts tight. With the car back on the ground or the wheel back on the ground, I'm going to torque the lug nuts to 90 foot pounds in a star pattern. And then once I got that done, I'm going to use the 19-millimeter socket to tighten up the plastic caps on the hubcap. Just remember that there is a notch in the hubcap here for the valve stem, and you're going to want to line those up. And then once I got those all lined up, go ahead and tighten them up. And at this point, I recommend having an alignment done on the vehicle. Make sure it's driving nice and straight down the road.
We hope this helps you out. Brought to you by www.1AAuto.com, your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the Internet. Please feel free to call us toll-free, 888-844-3393. We're the company that's here for you on the Internet and in person.
PSA56260
In Stock
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Customer Q&A
Does this kit include new mounting plates?August 17, 2015
Montana K
10
The kit did not have anything other than what was pictured ( 2 complete struts & 2 sway bar links).
It took me approximately 2 hours to remove the old broken parts and install the new using only hand tools once the car was supported. The installation videos were spot on and made this first time repair simple. Love this site!!!
August 17, 2015
Albin C
10
IT comes as an assembled unit no mounting plates were required on rhis vehicle
August 17, 2015
Dennis M
Customer service
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