So for the past few months I have had a clunking noise coming from the front end of my 2005 chevy cobalt whenever I go over bumps, make sharp turns and so on.
So jacked up the car and found the sway bar so loose that I could move it back and forth (side to side) with very little weight. Also could tell the bushings were wearing down the sway bar. So first instinct was to replace the bushings.
Pulled the links off as well to find that they were also bad. (very loose at the ends, lot of play)
Soooo... after replacing these parts (bushings and links) and tightening back up, the clunk went away for about 10 miles and came right back clunking even harder! Jacked the car back up to find that the bolts on the links loosened up. Thought it was my fault. Tightened them as hard as possible, which I thought I did from the start. Took it for a test drive to find that they came loose again only after 5 miles!!!! The third time around, I added in some lock washers and thread locker.
So far seems to be working (been 2 days). clunking is gone and car handles much better. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that this problem does not come back! What a poor design on GM's part on the sway bar, the bushings and the links! After doing a lot of research I keep coming across a TON of similiar horror stories where this problem keeps coming back to haunt them down the road. Anyone run into these problems? How did you fix yours?
Also.. something very odd I found from the sway bar that made no sense to me. The sway bar has rings on it where the bushings would sit against, after installing the new bushings and looking into the engine compartment down at the sway bar, I could notice a 1/2 gap between the "stopper" on the sway bar and the bushing. Is this a wrong size sway bar? why would there be a gap between these two? It would make sense for these to be flush together so that there is no play in the sway bar... another poor design on chevy/gm I imagine, or am I dealing with an aftermarket sway bar that doesnt match?
So jacked up the car and found the sway bar so loose that I could move it back and forth (side to side) with very little weight. Also could tell the bushings were wearing down the sway bar. So first instinct was to replace the bushings.
Pulled the links off as well to find that they were also bad. (very loose at the ends, lot of play)
Soooo... after replacing these parts (bushings and links) and tightening back up, the clunk went away for about 10 miles and came right back clunking even harder! Jacked the car back up to find that the bolts on the links loosened up. Thought it was my fault. Tightened them as hard as possible, which I thought I did from the start. Took it for a test drive to find that they came loose again only after 5 miles!!!! The third time around, I added in some lock washers and thread locker.
So far seems to be working (been 2 days). clunking is gone and car handles much better. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that this problem does not come back! What a poor design on GM's part on the sway bar, the bushings and the links! After doing a lot of research I keep coming across a TON of similiar horror stories where this problem keeps coming back to haunt them down the road. Anyone run into these problems? How did you fix yours?
Also.. something very odd I found from the sway bar that made no sense to me. The sway bar has rings on it where the bushings would sit against, after installing the new bushings and looking into the engine compartment down at the sway bar, I could notice a 1/2 gap between the "stopper" on the sway bar and the bushing. Is this a wrong size sway bar? why would there be a gap between these two? It would make sense for these to be flush together so that there is no play in the sway bar... another poor design on chevy/gm I imagine, or am I dealing with an aftermarket sway bar that doesnt match?