Jump to content

'92 GTP, Why is it making this noise?


Go to solution Solved by 55trucker,

Recommended Posts

Posted

How long has it been since the strut bearings were lubricated or replaced?

  • Like 3
Posted

Yep, strut bearing can make that sound.  Does it make that sound on the ground too?  I feel like I remember them being noisier with no load.

  • Like 1
Posted

Never, I didn't know there were strut bearings, and nowhere in the FSM does it mention lubricating them as part of regular maintenance.   In fact, it says there is nothing that needs lubrication in the suspension at all.

Posted

It's making some weird groaning noises when turning the wheel on the ground, and that's what it does in the air.  Been doing this ever since I swapped to the 96s for the upgraded brakes.

  • Solution
Posted

The bearings were never intended to go unattended for periods this long.

they are located in the centre of the lower spring seat, in a steel encased raceway, I can't remember precisely but there is approx 60 maybe 70 small ball bearings in the race.

One has to disassemble the strut off the car to get at them. I've done them twice now in the time I've owned the car. Even tho you can hear the groaning you may still be able to salvage them, one has to remove the race from the spring seat, remove the upper cap, drop them all out into a pan & clean them all, clean out the raceway, reapply a healthy amount of EP grease and set them back into the race, press the cap back down on & reinsert the race back into the spring seat.

It is time consuming....and one needs a spring compressor.

 

 

W body lower spring seat with bearing.jpg

Posted (edited)

First Guess:  Once you have it all apart far enough to lube them...you'll discover that the roller elements and the races are scarred from lack of lube, and they just plain need to be replaced.

And that's fine...but then you figure you might as well replace the struts while you have it apart.  And if you're gonna slap struts on it, you might as well upgrade the springs.  And the control arm bushings, and sway-bar bushings.  Which is a perfect time to check and replace the ball joints if needed.  By that time, the brakes are apart, so replace the calipers, check the rotors and pads for wear, and deal with whatever you find including the brake hoses and maybe the ABS wheel-speed sensors and front hubs.

Well, you have it that far apart, so a quick-ratio rack 'n' pinion with fresh tie rod ends isn't so much more work, and that means flushing the PS fluid, too.  Some folks think a real PS cooler is a good idea--better than a bunch of tubing looped back-and-forth like the OEM "cooler"...

Edited by Schurkey
Posted

So, I thought about the strut bearing suggestion, and should point out that it only does this at first - if you spin the wheel back and do it again, it doesn't make the sound.  I'm thinking if it's worn bearings it would do it every time and only when under pressure, not when unloaded.  Thoughts?

Posted

Additionally,  I found a small hole in the bottom of the spring perch and I'm thinking a shot of white lithium up there might help.

Posted
9 minutes ago, crazyd said:

So, I thought about the strut bearing suggestion, and should point out that it only does this at first - if you spin the wheel back and do it again, it doesn't make the sound.  I'm thinking if it's worn bearings it would do it every time and only when under pressure, not when unloaded.  Thoughts?

Try this.....remove the wheel(s), disconnect the tie rod end from the knuckle, with the wheels off the ground you should be able to freely turn the knuckle by hand, the bearing at the bottom of the spring.......everything including the spring seat & above remains stationary, everything below the spring seat (including the bearing) rotates with the movement of the rack. 

Posted
18 minutes ago, crazyd said:

Additionally,  I found a small hole in the bottom of the spring perch and I'm thinking a shot of white lithium up there might help.

The bearing race doesn't have an opening one can get at to squirt in some lube.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...