Family breakfast at the Olympus Diner this morning, then over to the local tree lot for an overpriced Fraser Fir. Got home, set up and watered the overpriced tree, then headed to work to see if my pass card would let me in on Sunday. It worked, so I got busy on the front suspension.
I started with the LF upper, because it was in the worst shape. Out with the old:
And in with the new:
Note: see those nuts on the UCA cross-shaft? Always loosen them for assembly. Makes tool access easier. Don’t tighten them until the suspension is at about ride height. You can get pretty close by jacking up under the LBJ until the frame starts to lift off the jack stand.
This info is slightly out-of-order. I’m throwing away a little bit of $ on this job, as I bought new UCA and LCA assemblies and immediately removed the ball joints. Lowers press-fit, Uppers are retained by rivets on assembled arms and replacements bolt in after cutting rivets:
Taking a page from the Dusterbd13 S10 book, I got a set of ProForged tall UBJs and LBJs.
The tall lower drops the nose about 1/2”, and the UBJ/LBJ combo gives a better camber curve. And having complete assemblies means straight R&R instead of stripping, painting, pressing out old bushings, etc.
OK, back to the job. With new hotness LF UCA in place, I moved to the RF UCA, figuring I definitely need the UCAs to match. ProForged says the tall UBJs can be used with standard LBJs, so I figured I’d do UCAs and shocks, then see if I’d have enough time to do the LCAs. The RF UCA went smoothly, so I jumped into shock therapy. The RF fought me a little:
But I prevailed. The top nut got stuck on removal, so I tried to reverse direction and the top of the shaft broke off right where you’re supposed to hold it to prevent rotation and allow the nut to thread on or off. With no vice grips in the tool box (srsly WTF), I hacksaw’d through the shaft:
then installed the new Bilstein on RF and moved to the LF. Repeat trials and tribulations of RF, with added breakage of J-nut on lower mount, which required additional hacksawing to liberate. There was no way to turn back, so I had to figure out the way forward.
We have several sample bins from a fastener supplier, so I dug around looking for a similar-length bolt and matching nut. Or a reasonable facsimile. Found some torque-retaining nuts in the correct thread, but no bolts.
Back down to the shop, wandering around thinking about where I might be able to rob an M8x1.25x35mm bolt, and I see this:
Lower left corner, that’s a bag of chair and stool assembly hardware, all M8x1.25! There was a 50mm Phillips head screw that I decided to modify. I know it’s craptastic Grade 2 strength but it will get me home. Moar hacksaws:
and a couple of nuts jammed together:
makes a “good enough” bolt. There was just enough room to get a 1/4”-drive 13mm socket between the shock body and a loose nut inside the coil spring:
And just like that, a good enough to get me home repair:
Total stroke of luck, finding that bag of chair hardware. It was getting late (9PM-ish) and I have to be up early tomorrow, so I called it quits here. Jacked up under LBJs and tightened the UCA bushing cross-shaft nuts, cleaned up tools and shop, and headed for home.
She drives so much better! Steering effort is a little higher since the UBJs are new, but the dartiness over bumps is totally gone. Still a little clunk over big bumps, but I believe the LCAs and sway bar bushings will fix that. I’m really happy with the result so far.