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Item Condition:New
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How to Replace Sway Bar 1997-2005 Chevy Venture
How to Replace Front Sway Bar 2000-07 Chevy Monte Carlo
Created on:
Tools used
Flat Blade Screwdriver
Torque Wrench
15mm Socket
Rust Penetrant
Jack Stands
19mm Socket
Lug Wrench
Ratchet
Floor Jack
1/2 Inch Socket
1. Remove the wheel
Loosen the lug nuts
Raise and secure the vehicle
Remove the lug nuts and the wheel.
2. Remove the stabilizer link.
Jack up the control arm to relieve pressure.
Remove the 13 mm nut and use a pair of vise grips on the bushing to remove the stabilizer link.
3. Remove the sway bar
Unbolt the two 15 mm bolts securing the mounting brackets.
Pull off the bushings and remove the sway bar.
4. Install the new sway bar
Slide the sway bar into place.
Put the bushings on and clip the brackets on.
Install the stabilizer links.
Put the bushings into place and thread in the stabilizer link bolt and screw down the nut at the top.
Bolt in the sway bar brackets using your socket and wrench.
5. Put the wheel back on
Hand tighten the lug nuts.
Lower the car.
Torque the lug nuts, using a star pattern to 100 ft lbs.
Brought to you by 1AAuto.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 1A Auto.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 are going to show you have to replace the front sway bar or stabilizer bar on this Chevy Venture. The stabilizer bar does fit a whole bunch of different GM cars and minivans so the procedures are going to be basically the same as this vehicle although there may be some differences if you're doing it on an Impala or a Grand Prix. Tool you will need include a flat blade screwdriver, 19 mm socket and ratchet or your tire iron, jack and jack stands, torque wrench, penetrating oil, in. socket and ratchet, hammer and also a 15 mm socket and ratchet.
Start by removing the wheel. Use a screwdriver to pry off the center cap. The wheel lug nuts are 19 mm. If you're using hand tools you will want to have the vehicle on the ground, loosen up the lug nuts and then raise up the vehicle and secure it. Remove them the rest of the way. I'm going to use air tools. I'll fast forward through finishing this and obviously you want to take this wheel off and the other wheel off as well. You can see I've sprayed this link with lots of penetrating fluid and what I'm going to do is I'm going to jack up the suspension here. What that's going to do is release some of the pressure. You can actually see that this stabilizer bar is cracked right there. Jacking it up to relieves some of the pressure. On this vehicle these are half in. It could be different. It could be a 13 mm on your vehicle, but you want a wrench on top and something to hold it on the bottom and pull. The longer you soak it with that penetrating fluid, the easier it will come apart. The only reason I'm fast forwarding here is because obviously I'm doing everything on the passenger side, but what I'm doing off camera is once I complete one step on the passenger side I'm doing that same step on the driver's side. Just something to keep in mind as I let this down here. Now you want to spray a whole bunch of penetrating oil down on the shaft of that bolt. I've got a set of vice grips on the middle of the bushing and my wrench down at the bottom and I'm just working that bolt free of that bushing. Now I'm basically just taking a hammer and beat on it. You can see it starts going down. Then you can pull that right out. Then pull that whole assembly right out.
Right in here you've got two 15 mm bolts and if you turn your wheels all the way to the other side it's pretty easy to get in there. I've got a deep reach socket although you can get in there with a regular socket as well. They are actually not that difficult. I'm just going to use an air ratchet and speed this up a little bit. I repeated that procedure for the other side and this might give you an idea of why these need to get replaced sometimes. Part of the end just fell apart. What are going to want to do is pull off these bushings on the other side as well. I've got the other side pretty much free. I'm going to freeze it for a second here. This is the part if you have an Impala or a Grand Prix or a Regal you may need to actually drop your engine carriage down which is nothing more than the two big bolts underneath those brackets. Support it with your jack. Undo those two bolts and let the engine carriage down a few inches and that gives you more room to do this if you have a problem getting the bar out. Bend it down like that. It will pull right out. Like I said you can see on this side that's what happens to them. They are hollow so they get some moisture in there and then they end up breaking on the end.
Here's the new bar from 1AAuto and our bar is solid. It's not hollow so you won't ever have that problem again even though the car may not last another 100,000 miles. It does go in. It's got a bend in the middle and that goes up so you want to feed it in there that way. Slowly feed it in. Our bar comes with all new bushings and brackets. The bushings just have a split in them. Feed them around the bar. It's roughly in place.
What I'm going to do is just use a little bit of hand soap and just put it on the inside of this bracket here. Makes it that much easier. You don't want to use grease or anything because that could eat away into the bushings. The hand soap is nice and mild. It just allows the bracket to go down on there quite a bit easier. I'll repeat that on the other side.
Now to put your end link in you want to undo it here. You've got the washer in that bushing and then take out this whole assembly here which is two bushings and a spacer. Carefully put that right in between the stabilizer bar and your control arm. Then you've got your link with the bushing on the bottom, push that up through. Finish it off with your bushing on top. Then start your nut on top here. Then you want to put the other side together the same way.
For the bushing I'm just going to use my original bolts because they are flattened here which makes them easier to start. It does come with new bolts, but since they don't have this shoulder on them they are a little more difficult to use. If you break your bolts obviously you can use these. I prefer using the original ones.
You have to keep the wheel straight or else the bar interferes with the steering until you get it somewhat bolted down. You can see I've got my bracket on here. I've got one side down and I'll try to start this rear bolt. I've got both those started. I'm going to go do the same thing to the other side. That's what this is. You do one thing on one side and you do the same thing on the other side until you start getting it going.
Now what we want to do is tighten up our length just preliminarily. You don't want to tighten it up all the way. You don't want to tighten anything up until you have the weight back on the front suspension. What I'm going to do is- I'll just tighten up the other side a little bit. I have the brackets on both sides and the links started. What I've done, see I've got it on my wheels with a piece of wood. Then over here I have it on my jack so all the weight is on the front suspension which it should be. You can see the vehicle is off the lift. Basically the procedure now is I'm going to tighten up my bracket bolts not all the way tight, but just so the bracket is about in away from the frame.
Then once I tighten those bracket bolts then I'm going to tighten up my links all the way. Then I will finish by tightening up the bracket bolts. Now I am tightening up the bracket bolts and again not tightening them up all the way yet. Actually what I'm doing there is I'm kind of pressing down on the bolt with the socket which helps start it. I found that one of them wasn't quite started yet, but I'm tightening those up. Now off camera I tightened up the other side and I tightened up the link so now I'm tightening up the link on my passenger side all the way. Basically you tighten until you can't tighten anymore. You don't have to be extremely tight. Then once you're done with the link then you tighten up the frame bushing bolts all the way. Then you can jack up the vehicle and remove the jack stands or actually jack up the vehicle some, remove the blocks from under the wheels, put your tires back on, remove the jack stands and put the thing back on the ground and you're all set. Here I am putting the wheel back on. I'll put the lug nuts on with my fingers. Then I'll use the air wrench to just tighten them up a little bit. Then with the wheel on the ground I will tighten them up to 100 foot pounds with the torque wrench. I'll use a star pattern crisscrossing.
We hope this helps you out. Brought to you buy 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
14mm Wrench
13mm Socket
15mm Wrench
Hammer
Torque Wrench
14mm Socket
Jack Stands
18mm Socket
19mm Socket
Ratchet
Floor Jack
1. Removing the Wheel
Loosen the lug nut covers with a 19mm socket
Pry off the center cap with a flat blade screwdriver
Loosen the lug nuts with the vehicle on the ground
Raise the vehicle with a floor jack
Secure the vehicle on jack stands
Remove the lug nuts
Pull off the wheel
2. Removing the Sway Bar Link
Spray the top of the stabilizer link with penetrating oil
Place a 14mm wrench to hold the top
Place a 14mm socket on the bottom
Turn the 14mm socket to loosen the sway bar link
Remove the top bushings
Remove the sway bar link
Remove the center bushings
Loosen the 15mm bolts on the sway bar mount
Repeat the process for the other sway bar link
Lift the sway bar up
Remove the 15mm bolts on the sway bar mount
3. Removing the Sway Bar
Place a jack on the cross bar
Remove the two 18mm bolts from the subframe
Slowly lower the jack stand
Hammer off the sway bar mounts
Remove the rubber from the sway bar
Pull the sway bar down and out
4. Installing the New Sway Bar
Insert the new sway bar and angle it forward
Place the bushing into the sway bar link
Place the sway bar onto the sway bar link
Place the nut on top of the bushing by hand
Repeat the process for the other side
Push the mount onto the bar
Push the bracket over the mount
5. Tightening the Sway Bar and Frame
Replace the two 15mm bolts on the sway bar mount
Place a jack on the cross bar
Replace and tighten the two 18mm bolts on the subframe
6. Simulating the Weight
Place jack stands underneath the control arms
Place the weight of the vehicle on the jack stands
Tighten up the sway bar links with a 14mm ratchet
Tighten up each of the 15mm mounts on the sway bar
7. Reattaching the Wheel
Slide the wheel into place
Start the lug nuts by hand
Tighten the lug nuts preliminarily
Lower the vehicle to the ground
Tighten the lug nuts to 100 foot-pounds in a crossing or star pattern
Reattach the center cap
Tighten the lug nut covers with a 19mm socket
Brought to you by 1AAuto.com, your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the Internet.
Hi, I'm Mike 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're going to show you how to replace the front sway bar on this 2003 Chevy Monte Carlo. It's the same part and similar process on these Monte Carlos from 2000 to 2007. The items you'll need include a new front sway bar from 1AAuto.com, 13mm, 14mm, 18mm and 19mm sockets, a ratchet, 14mm and 15mm wrenches, a hammer, and jack and jack stands.
Remove the tire by just loosening up these lug nut caps. Now, you can remove your lug nuts. If you don't have air powered tools, you want to loosen these up while the vehicle is on the ground. Then raise the vehicle and remove the nuts the rest of the way. If you do have air-powered tools, you can just remove them right here.
Spray down the top of the link with some penetrating oil and then use a 14mm wrench to hold the top with a 14mm socket and ratchet on the bottom. Ours actually comes apart easily. It's not uncommon. Sometimes the link is totally broken, and you don't even have to do this step. You just pull the remains out. And also, sometimes they're frozen up so bad you have to use a saw or a torch to cut the links out.
Pull the top bushings off and push the sway bar link down and out. Then remove the bushings in the center. Use a 15mm wrench and loosen these two bolts on your sway bar mount. You can see we're using an extra wrench to help break it free. We do the same thing here, but you'll notice this one is a little hard to remove right now. We fix that, and you want to just remove the sway bar link from this side. You can see on this side that our sway bar is actually broken. Now, you want to just lift the sway bar up and now that that's out of the way, you can remove these two 15mm bolts the rest of the way. We'll fast-forward as Mike does that.
Place a jack on this crossbar and then remove these two 18mm bolts. We'll just fast-forward as Mike does that. Now, carefully lower the jack slowly, and then hammer off these mounts. Once you get the metal off, you just pull this rubber part off. Do the same thing on this side. If it still doesn't fit, you can lower it down a bit more and then just pull the bar down.
Up top is the old sway bar; below is the new one from 1A Auto. You can see they're identical, and will fit exactly the same. The new one also comes with two new mounts and two new sway bar links.
Feed your new sway bar link up into place. Angle it forward and clip it on to the sway bar over there if you didn't entirely remove it. If you did, you want to just put the sway bar bolt up through. Put the bushings on. Push the sway bar down into place, and then put that top bushing and the nut back on top. You don't need to tighten this; you're just using this to hold it into place.
Have that set up on both sides, and then push the mount on to the bar. Then push the metal bracket down over that. Then replace those two 15mm bolts, and then repeat the process on the other side. Now, raise the jack back up. Once you have it in position, replace those two 18mm bolts and tighten them up.
When you tighten up the sway bar, you want to simulate all the weight being on the suspension. You want to have the sway bar in the riding position. Put jack stands underneath the control arms and carefully put the weight down on the jack stands and then tighten up all the mounts on the sway bar. Then replace your wheel and each of the lug nuts. You want to just tighten them preliminary, lower the vehicle, and tighten them the rest of the way.
We hope this video 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.
Product Reviews
Loading reviews
4.97/ 5.035
35 reviews
5 Stars
4 Stars
3 Stars
2 Stars
1 Star
34
1
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Eric Stake
September 25, 2010
Nice and solid (2x better than factory!) and it went in well. Big improvement in the car's handling. Great customer service to boot!
2006 Impala Sway bar Kit
Darrell
February 19, 2017
Easy installation nicely made and good quality thanks!
Solid vs. Hollow
John
February 28, 2017
OEM sway bar comes hollow from GM. Rusted through and broke on my 2003 Monte Carlo. No safety issue, just some clunking noises when turning and had to take it easier in general with high-speed turns. 1A Auto's replacement bar is solid, heavy and the fit was excellent. Only thing I didn't like was that it's made in China. Didn't know that until it arrived, but apparently the CEO keeps a close watch on his manufacturing operations over there. Customer service is excellent.
Fits Perfectly
Jacob
March 13, 2017
After my original broke; I bought the bar because of watching the youtube video of 1aauto showing how to install it. This bar is 3x heavier than the original, but that's because it's solid and the original was hollow. Good product, easy install, great customer service.
Love the videos!
Maurice
March 18, 2017
The videos take away all the questions I may have about doing the job myself. Easy ordering and fast delivery. Thank You!
sway bar better than ome
ADAM
March 18, 2017
part great . box arrived no sway bar box bad damaged. call A1 no problem had part next day
Great
Bruce
August 10, 2017
Can't be beat, great price, free shipping, far superior to OEM.Thanks.
Front end part
Scott
October 27, 2017
This was an part I didn't know I needed until I was replacing the rest of the front end. Ordered the part and it came quick and with all I needed.
Good
Heavy Duty Sway Bar
Glen
December 14, 2017
Sway bay is solid and came with all bushings and hardware. It fit like glove!
Great Value
thomas
January 21, 2018
Installation and fit was great. And it appeared to be powder coated.
Fit and works perfectly
A
February 1, 2018
Parts fit perfectly and work great. I will buy from 1A Auto first when I need parts.
Good parts
Lawrence
February 16, 2018
It was easy to install with everything need to do it
Perfect fitting complete sway bar kit.
Allan
March 30, 2018
I have watched many A1 auto videos for installation help and they always say presented with hope you will consider them for parts purchase. Their price was comparable to the local chain store so I ordered the kit. It arrived quickly and with all the pieces we needed for replacement. Highly recommended based on this purchase and their installation knowledge. Will use from now on. :-)
perfect
jim
August 20, 2018
more solid than the original. came with all the parts. fit perfect
Sway bar for 08 Impala
Andrew
September 9, 2018
I was working in the brakes when I saw the end of the sway bar half broken off. I'm YouTube trained, and I was afraid it was something I was going to need a lift for. Nope. Super easy installation. Remove the bolts (I cut the links with a grinder) disconnect one steering control arm and the sway bar comes right out the side. Good purchase.
Great fit. Easy install
Joe-
September 24, 2018
Video was a great help. Sway bar is solid, not hollow like he original. Control arm needs to be tightened up after a few hundred miles, good practice.
great part, great price
B
November 30, 2018
Perfect fit. Appears to be more heavy duty than the original. Best price I could find and received quickly.
Heavy duty
matt
January 10, 2019
Great aftermarket /stock size part for 2007 Grand prix. Had to loosen the two bolts that hold the front to the rest of the car a inch or so but well worth the time and money.
Sway Bar
Allen
March 26, 2019
Direct fit. I will buy more parts from them!!
Very happy with the parts
J
August 13, 2019
I purchased my parts online, received in 2-3 days, everything was in the box, and they were the right parts, bolt on perfect!
Nick's buick
Nicholas
August 23, 2019
I received the sway bar promptly it was perfect better than the factory gm the bushings and sway bar end links were just like the factory gm ones I would I highly recommend this part especially if you want to keep your car like original
rickey
October 2, 2019
Perfect fit
Very pleased
Erin
October 30, 2019
Recieved just what I needed in a timely manner. I would recommend.
perfect fit and packing
jeff
September 11, 2020
My order came faster then I expected. The packing of this item was almost over done. I work for a shipping company and I've seen products like this with pieces missing and poking out of boxes. great packing, above all the sway bar was exact fit with great quality and all fasteners were packaged separate and strongly taped to the sway bar. Thanks
Fits
Jeremy
December 9, 2020
The sway bar matched up to my old one and came with all the needed hardware. 2005 impala
Great product, price, and shipping!
DEREK
January 10, 2021
This was exactly what I needed. Fit perfectly, works great. Found it for a great price including shipping and it showed up in just a few days. Would definitely buy from 1a auto again!
Happy Customer
Tianna
April 15, 2021
I am very satisfied with my purchase!
Solid replacement.
Duane
August 3, 2021
Exact replacement. Solid too.
Better than the original
Scott
October 15, 2021
Fit my car perfectly! Took two of us about an hour to replace the broken one. Did NOT have to lower the sub frame. Draw it out on the passenger side to avoid fuel line on drivers side. Insert from passenger side also. My Monte handles great now!
Awesome
Rickey
May 25, 2022
Awesome
Sway Bar broke, 1Aauto to the rescue!
Schelesia
July 17, 2023
Thank goodness for your fast shipping. Got me back on the road in only a few days!!
Front anti-swaybar
Richard
November 13, 2023
Perfect fit
great part
stephen
March 28, 2024
great part was able to return it as mine was good
Quality in all areas
Keith
August 15, 2024
This product just like all the others I have purchased through 1A over the years was just what I needed. Great quality, great shipping times and great customer service.
Great replacement
Gary
October 25, 2024
Replaces old broken sway bar
Customer Q&A
Do I need to loosen the pinch bolt when replacing the sway bar. 2006 Impala??May 24, 2017
Jeffrey Lockwood J
10
I didn't. I had a 2003 Buick century though. I was going to, but I found I didn't need to. I was working with a lift too, so the job was easier for me.
May 24, 2017
E I
10
Mine was 2004 Venture. Did not have to loosen pinch bolt but did have to unhook passenger tie rod.
May 25, 2017
James T
10
The front sub fram bolts take them out but put a jack under it first and let it down with the jack just around a inch maybe just enough to let you slide it in then jack back up put bolts back in before going on just for safety. Hope this helps.
May 25, 2017
Barry B
I see two sway bars in the picture diagram but description says one quantity, so what is the quantity actually provide when purchased? Cause I need two.May 14, 2019
D O
10
This will come with the sway bars assembled as shown and will include all of the pieces in the photo.
May 14, 2019
Emma F
Is the center link included in this?October 1, 2020
Gabby C
10
There was no shortage of parts that were to be included, so I'm saying yes it was there or go to web page an look up kit number an see what's included. Maybe a phone call or Email you guys that's also worked for me. Peace , out.
October 1, 2020
Douglas J
10
Thank you for your inquiry, Gabby! Yes the entire sway bar in included with this kit.
October 1, 2020
T I
Customer service
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