Kit Includes: (2) Front Outer Tie Rods (2) Front Inner Tie Rods
Specification
Side Location
Driver & Passenger Side
Location
Front
Inner & Outer
Install Tip: When replacing steering components, have a professional alignment performed afterwards. This ensures proper tracking and even tire wear.
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.
FREE Shipping is standard on Orders shipped to the lower 48 States (Contiguous United States). Standard shipping charges apply to Hawaii, Alaska and US Territories. Shipping is not available to Canada.
Expedited is available on checkout to the United States, excluding Alaska, Hawaii and US Territories as well as P.O. Boxes and APO/FPO/DPO addresses. Final shipping costs are available at checkout.
How to Replace Tie Rods 2001-10 GMC Sierra 2500 HD Truck
How To Replace Inner Tie Rods 2001-10 GMC Sierra 2500 HD
Created on:
Tools used
Adjustable Wrench
35mm Socket
Torque Wrench
Tie Rod Fork
Jack Stands
Grease Gun
Rubber Mallet
Tie Rod Puller
7mm Socket
Lug Wrench
Ratchet
Floor Jack
Needle nose pliers
1. Remove the wheel
Loosen the lug nuts.
Raise and secure the vehicle.
Remove the wheel.
2. Remove the tie rod assembly
Remove the tie rod bolt.
Use a pickle fork and hammer to separate it.
Use an adjustable wrench and a fitted wrench to remove the tie rod assembly.
3. Install the new tie rod assembly
Adjust your new tie rod assembly to match the old one for a preliminary alignment.
Mount the new tie rod assembly and tighten it in with a wrench.
Tighten the nut on the tie rod stud to 65 ft lbs.
Install the cotter pin.
Use a 7 mm wrench to install the grease fitting
With a grease gun, grease the inner and outer joints.
4. Put the wheel back on
Preliminarily tighten the lug nuts.
Lower the car and torque the lug nuts to 120 ft lbs using a star pattern.
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-something 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 I'm going to show you inner and outer tie rod replacement. This truck actually just needed the inner, but if you're replacing the inner, you might as well replace the outer as well. These tie rods fit this whole generation of GM trucks and SUV's - trucks from 98 - 06 and SUV's from 99 - 07. The tools you'll need are a jack and jack stands, a 22 mm lug wrench or socket and ratchet. You'll need either a 35 mm wrench or a 12 inch adjustable wrench that can go to 35 mm and then you'll need a second adjustable wrench as well, a tie rod removal tool, a grease gun, torque wrench, and pliers. The clunking noise was the inner tie rod. You can see here, when I shake the tire back and forth you'll see the inner tie rod move but that steering arm inside doesn't move, so you know there's play in there and it needs to be replaced.
Start out by raising and securing the vehicle on a jack stand and then remove your cap and wheel. We're going to remove this bolt. We've got a ratchet. If you don't have a breaker bar, use a ratchet and a piece of pipe. The bolt should come off pretty easily. Take the bolts off most of the way. I'm planning on replacing the outer tie rod as well, so I'm going to use a pickle fork to separate it. The best way to go about this is to get the wrench on it from underneath and push. That should break her free. I'm just going to speed up as I pull that out. You want to make sure that your outer tie rod spins with the wrench so the whole assembly spins and you don't shorten or lengthen the tie rod -- the inner and outer tie rod assembly.
There's your whole assembly out. If you can see here, I've got my old assembly, inner tie rod and outer tie rod, and I want to measure right from the edge of this surface here right to the end. I'm taking my new inner tie rod and outer tie rod and I put them together, just to compare. This will give you a good preliminary alignment. We'll put this nut a little closer. We can put it together now. It will be a good preliminary alignment until you can get your vehicle to a shop where you can get a real alignment.
I'm just leaving my nut right there and spinning my outer tie rod off. The nut marks the place where your tie rod was and then taking off that outer tie rod just makes it easier to get the inner one on. That allows me put my inner tie rod on. Speed it up here as I use the wrench to tighten the tie rod up. Then I can put my outer tie rod right back on and go right up to the nut. Then I'll just fast-forward here as I put that outer tie rod back on the inner tie rod. Now I'm just taking the nut or just getting the outer tie rod in place. Take the nut off the new tie rod, and I'm just going to get some of the debris off the steering knuckle there, and then you can push on the stud on the tie rod and get it lined up with the steering knuckle, and then push it up and in, and start your nut back on.
We'll tighten this up to 65 foot-pounds. Pull a little tighter here and we can get this cotter pin through. We'll fast-forward here as we install the cotter pin and bend the end over and then use a 7 mm wrench and install our grease fitting. We'll take a wrench screw up here. The other one holds the outer tie rod and just tighten up the block nut. Now you want to use a grease gun and grease both the joint for the outer tie rod and the inner tie rod.
Use some more fast-forward here. As you put the wheel and tire back on, start all the lug nuts one by one by hand first, then use your wrench to preliminary tighten them, then you can lower the vehicle back down on the ground, torque the lug nuts to 120 foot-pounds. I'm using a crossing pattern and then I do it one more time, go around all eight and make sure they're tight. Then you can put your center cap back on and you should be all set.
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
Adjustable Wrench
Bearing Grease
Torque Wrench
Paper Towels
Jack Stands
Floor Jack
Grease Gun
Liquid Thread Locker
1. Removing the Inner Tie Rod
Raise and secure the vehicle
Measure the length of the inner tie rod to the outer tie rod with a tape measure
Measure this length at extension and in compression
Note those measurements
Clean grease from the inner tie rod fitting
Loosen the inner tie rod from the steering rack with an adjustable wrench
Hold the outer tie rod in place with a wrench
Loosen the inner tie rod from the outer tie rod with the adjustable wrench
Remove the tie rod at the steering rack
Turn the inner tie rod counterclockwise to remove it from the outer tie rod
2. Installing the New Inner Tie Rod
Apply thread lock to the threads on the steering rack side of the inner tie rod
Use a floor jack to keep the stabilizer link above the working area
Thread the inner tie rod on to the steering rack
Tighten the inner tie rod to between 70 – 80 foot-pounds of torque
Twist the nut onto the outer end of the inner tie rod by hand
Turn the tire in to push the inner tie rod into the outer tie rod
3. Adjusting the Inner Tie Rod
Measure the length of the inner tie rod to the outer tie rod with a tape measure
Turn the inner tie rod with the adjustable wrench until its length is the noted length from Step 1
4. Greasing the Fittings
Use a grease gun to add grease to the inner tie rod fitting
Add grease until the tie rod boot starts to change shape
Add grease to other fittings as necessary
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, I'm going to replace an inner tie rod on this 2002 GMC Sierra. This procedure is the same for millions of GMC Sierra, Chevy Silverado, 1500 and 2500, 3500, pretty much all the same basic procedure. You'll need a couple of large adjustable wrenches. I found those work fine. You don't really need the exact size. Two large adjustable wrenches will work.You'll also need a tape measure and you'll need a grease gun with grease, and we do recommend that you have your vehicle aligned after a repair like this.
Here you can see, I have the vehicle up on a lift. Here is my inner tie rod running from here to here. This is the outer tie rod. You could see, I pull this boot down and I pull and what I'm looking at is basically the relationship of here to here and I can see some movement in here. I want to replace this. What I'm going to do is, I'm going to pull out, then I'm going to measure from there to there. Just a shade under ten inches, 9 and 15/16"?. Now, I'm going to pull it back in, and check here. It's about 9 and 7/8"?. When I put this back together, I'm going to set this right between 9 and 7/8"? and 9 and 15/16"?. I'm going to pull it apart. I'm just going to clean this off.
Take a nice big adjustable wrench. I'm loosening that up. On this end, I'm going to put a wrench on my outer tie rod just to hold it in place. We'll get that loosened up. I'm just going to speed up here. We loosened up the nut that's close to the center steering rack and then we loosened up the tie rod where it connects the outer tie rod. Take that nut off for the center steering first and then just turn the whole entire inner tie rod counter clockwise and take it out of the outer tie rod.
Here's a new tie rod from 1A Auto. It's always a good idea to put some thread lock on the inside. If you have your vehicle up on a lift, or a jack, you'll want to jack it up just to get, make sure your stabilizer bars up and out of the way. Thread it in and then use a wrench and tighten this. This should be tightened to 74 foot-pounds. Anywhere between 70 and 80 foot-pounds. In this shot, what I didn't explain very clearly, you can see where that red arrow is. I have a jack underneath the suspension. It just helps lift it up so that the stabilizer bar isn't in the way when you start the tie rod into the center steering link. With this wrench, just pull it nice and tight. Now I'm going to assemble the outer end. I'm going to put this nut on. Then to bring this down on my tire and in. Make sure it's going together straight. If you remember our measurement, basically, we want to be right at 9 and 31/32, so we've got a long way to go. I'm going to speed it up here as I keep using the wrench to turn the tie rod end into the outer tie rod end. I measured a couple of times just to see where I'm at. That is, it's just a little bit further than we want. Knock it off, right there. We've got our one wrench on here and then to tighten, hold on to the outer tie rod, taking that up nice and secure. Now make sure we grease the fitting. What I'm watching, I'm watching this boot here. Once that boot starts changing shape a little bit, I know the grease is in there. Then, while on here. I'm going to hit all my other grease spots as well.
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.
Parts were perfectly matched to my truck. No problems at all. Installation instructions were spot on!!! Local shops wanted anywhere from $900-$1100 to install. I did it for less than $100 plus front end alignment.
Kyle
November 15, 2017
The inner tie rods matched perfectly to my 2006 Chevy 1500, however the stud on the outer tie rod was thicker than the original. For this reason I was unable to use the outer tie rods because they would not fit through the hole. I needed to get my truck back on the road asap and ended up buying the outer tie rods locally.
04 duramax
Mark
April 22, 2018
Needed new inner outer tie rod. These are a great price. They were an exact fit. Absolutely no issues. Went right in.
Great resource
Mike
August 10, 2018
Great product availability and prices.
Thank you 1A Auto
Quick and accurate!
R
December 26, 2018
I'm finding out how quick A1 is anywhere. I had hit a deer in maine and could not afford to have a shop fix the damage, but with A1 Auto I made it to colorado on budget and on schedual with there next day shipping. I'm now comfortable with the accurracy of their parts, I'm used to always running to the napa to return a wrong or faulty part, but so far A1 Auto has been spot on and as always on point from check engine light to completion of the job!
5 atars
Paul
March 7, 2019
A little better description would be nice. I ended up calling the toll free number and got my question answered, so 5 stars.
Another great part from 1A auto
Bryan
March 18, 2019
Ordering was once again easy and shipping was fast. Part find was perfect.
Tie rods
John
June 9, 2019
These tie rods came in the mail fast and are the second order Ive placed from this company. I am very happy with the quality and would definitely recommend to friends.
Safety inspection requirements
David
August 17, 2019
My first got lost in the shipping but 1 A Auto hopped to it & I got the parts real quick ! I haven't installed the parts yet because I just received them yesterday & they looked to be a perfect match replacement !
Perfect fit
M
October 23, 2019
These went on my 2003 Chevy Silverado 2500hd and are perfect replacement parts.
05 gmc 3500 tie rods
Tomasz
December 4, 2019
Perfect fit great price
Tie rods
D
December 18, 2019
They were perfect and went together easy
Tie rods
Jonathon
January 13, 2020
They worked good
Good parts
M
January 29, 2020
Parts arrived early, which was cool. Then they were exactly what I expected, which was cool. Then they had a video showing how to install, just awesome! Appreciate what you guys do all while having some of the lowest prices and good parts, you rock.
Outstanding customer service
John
April 20, 2020
I would like to say the parts I ordered can individually wrapped and in excellent condition. What would have been better would have been ME making sure I didn't have upgraded parts on my vehicle and these parts would not fit.....BECAUSE OF MY IGNORANCE. I highly recommend 1A Auto's parts and videos are with their weight in gold in helping make this repair easy.
Best part store!
D
May 7, 2020
I wasnt sure at first about using 1a auto, but my expectations were exceeded! Price, quality, and and speedy shipping were all there. Love this site!
M
May 18, 2020
everything I order is correct and comes quickly. high quality parts. awsome company!
Chevy 2500 tie rods
Matt
August 28, 2020
Great product with fast shipping
Great company
Jacobe
September 23, 2020
Great company to buy auto parts from quality parts and fast online service..... ??
Inner & Outter Tie Rod
Adiel
October 19, 2020
Im happy with my purchase of these tie rods pair! I would highly recommend this product. Not only its more affordable then my local auto part stores but it comes with both passenger and driver side. Fast shipping! I will definitely be ordering more parts from 1AAuto.
This is the place to buy from
A
December 14, 2020
Everything went smoth package arrived looked up how to video so I had all the right tools and know how making this a easyand fast job thank you 1A AUTO
Bad parts
Tucker
May 6, 2021
I put my tie rods on and brought it to a shop to get realigned and the mechanic told me that the tie rods I just put on were junk cause they had play in them. Had to pay for new ones and pay for him to install the new ones.... not impressed
Loose in under a year.
Ray
May 12, 2021
Getting new tires and alignment done. And the tire shop does their normal inspection. And found the inner tie rods completely shot. These didn't even last a year. Hope the rest of this kit holds up.
Glenn
September 9, 2021
The inner and outer tie rod ends work great thanks
Nathan
September 28, 2021
Good
EJ
July 26, 2022
Fit perfectly
Good fit
Meredith
March 13, 2023
Fit and aligned well
Great product
Cory
April 13, 2023
Fit perfect for way to put in. You will need a huge wrench, my big adjustable worked
Customer Q&A
Will this fit the 1500 LS not HD?July 7, 2016
DJ V
10
NO
July 8, 2016
Brian F
Are these tie rods for both two and four wheel drive models?July 15, 2017
Paul M
10
Yes
July 15, 2017
Jeff B
I notice their no grease fittings on the outer tie rod. Are these already greased from 1A-Auto???January 28, 2018
Lawence B
10
Thanks for the question! These items are greased from the manufacturer and sealed. Thank you!
January 30, 2018
Adam G
Are these quick steer brand?April 16, 2018
Zachary R
10
Not sure of the manufacturer. I do know they work and fit perfectly. I have had them in my 2500HD for a year and a half without any issues.
April 17, 2018
Logan H
10
We have a few different aftermarket companies build these parts specifically for us, as our 1A Auto house brand. They are manufactured to the same OEM specifications as the original part that came with your vehicle. If you have any further questions, please don't hesitate to ask.
April 17, 2018
T I
Customer service
877-844-3393
Monday - Friday 8:00am - 9:30pm ET Saturday - Sunday 8:00am - 4:30pm ET
Chevrolet is a registered trademark of General Motors Company. 1A Auto is not affiliated with or sponsored by Chevrolet or General Motors Company.See all trademarks.
Enter Vehicle Year Make Model
Specify your vehicle's year, make and model to guarantee fit.
Year
Make
Model
Options
Drivetrain
This part doesn’t fit a . Select from parts that fit.