Today was the first day in two weeks that I’ve been able to work in the shop and it felt GREAT! The yard is finally DONE!
Last week while the wife and I were wheeling in Kanab I picked up a slight rattle in the front of our Jeep. I suspected sway bar links (again) and sure enough when I crawled under it I found slop in the link ends but with all of my yard work last week I haven’t had time to do anything about it until today.
I have had more issues with aftermarket sway bar links over the past several years between my Jeep and a few others that I’ve worked on. I’ve used BDS, JKS, Terafkex, Synergy and lastly ORE. I don’t get what is so difficult to manufacture a link that will live and live quietly. The ones I’ve had the best luck with are the ones that I fabricated about two years ago until one broke in the heat affected zone of one of my welds during our August 2017 trip to Ouray. They used a rubber encapsulated bushing are we’re very quiet for the couple of years and nearly 25k miles they were on my Jeep. I was going to merely repair them but when I built my Dynatrac Prorock 44 last year I just went ahead and bought a pair of the ORE (Off-Road Evolution) ones and they didn’t make it 8 months before they started rattling and carrying on. My wife said she could barely hear them last week but I heard them loud and clear and it drove me nuts most of the week during our vacation.
Most of the people we wheel with have so many noises and rattles they probably can’t detect any new noises anyways but mine is pretty tight so when a noise arises I hear it immediately. I don’t even run my clevis pins because I don’t like them banging and clanging around off road, I keep one handy next to my recovery strap so when I need one in a hurry it’s within easy reach but I don’t like them making noise hanging off my bumpers like most people on the trails.
I decided I had really good success with the OEM style sway bar links on my last couple of Jeeps so I purchased two rear sway bar links yesterday from my local NAPA and just went ahead and cut & lengthened them to the correct length rather than keep trying different aftermarket ones. We’ll see how long these last.
Links measured about 8.75” and I need them to be 11” center of stud to center of bolt hole.
I cut a couple pieces of .625” tubing by .065” wall thickness so it measured 1/2”ID which would allow the links to slip fit for welding. I’ll weld around the ends as well as drill a couple of holes for Rosette welds.
Test fitting.
Rosette welds done and letting cool before welding around the ends of the tubing.
Links completed and they measure exactly 11” on center.
Painted with Eastwood’s Semi-Gloss Extreme chassis black.
Installed and job completed.
The wife and I just returned from a Saturday afternoon drive and dinner and it is quiet as can be again.