DIY Control Arms
Tools you'll need: an (8mm, 17mm, 21mm sockets), 1 socket elbow of your choice 3/8 or 1/2 inch drive, T45 Torx bit, E18 Torx socket, hammer of your choice, ball joint separator the separator used a 19mm socket, air gun, and Loctite 243.
To begin have the car on a level surface and place the e-brake on. loosen lug nuts with a 17mm socket and then jack the car up from the middle jack point and place two jack stands in the little dip of the swing arm. as shown here
now let down your floor jack slowly and you are good to begin. first remove both wheels and place them under the body of the car to save you if your jack stands fail.
The culprit. as you can see the boot has been torn off. remove the nut on the bottom with a 21mm socket and the air gun.
Pick your poison to hammer the separator onto the ball joint. I used the 2 pound.
using a ball joint separator and a hammer of your choice hammer the separator onto the ball joint after the nut has been removed (21mm socket).
how I was able to separate the ball joint. it required a 19mm socket. I suggest using eye protection when hitting the separator with a high power impact air gun.
ball joint has been successfully separated. Once the joint is separated take off the front and middle under panels of the vehicle with a 8mm socket.
now the inner control arm bolt has a 21mm nut on one side
It has a E18 Torx socket on the other side.
2 breaker bars for the win!
here is the bolt removed. remember to loctite the bolts when re-installing the new arms.
part numbers
part numbers
They are right and left specific so remember to line them up before trying to install them.
use a 21mm socket and a T45 torx bit to tighten the nut down on the ball joint. use the T45 torx bit to hold the inner screw while tightening the nut.
passenger side has a couple cooler lines in the way. This is where the elbow comes into play.
To get the inner control arms to line up with the body so you can slide the bolt through you'll need to turn the wheel away from the side that you are working on about one full turn.
yup they were toast.
all done now go have some fun!
Last edited by gjunon; Mar 4, 2016 at 02:27 PM.
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If your tires are wearing so fast you only expect to get a few thousand miles out of them and you are apprehensive about driving over 50 mph in the rain...figure the ball joints and/or bushings are bad.
Been there, done that, got the T-shirt. I now expect to fully rebuild my W211 front suspension every 80,000 miles whether I think it needs it or not...hard lesson learned the first time. I'm not going to let it get to that point again. FWIW, it was at 90,000 miles the handling of my car became dangerous.




I have not had any problems with premature bushing wear. As of now I have put roughly 18,000 miles on the car since this post.



Very straightforward!

