Anti-roll bar links

Anti-roll bar links

An anti-roll bar link, often called a drop link, connects the anti-roll bar to a suspension strut, control arm or wheel carrier. As one wheel moves relative to the body, the link transfers that motion into the bar so it can resist unequal left-to-right suspension movement. Most modern links use one or two sealed ball joints; others use rubber or polyurethane bushes, sleeves and washers. Correct articulation is essential because the link changes angle through steering and suspension travel.

Match by VIN, build date, axle and left/right position, then confirm link length, stud diameter, thread pitch, ball-joint angle, body offset and mounting arrangement. Sport suspension, adaptive dampers, raised or lowered ride height and different axle loads can alter the specification. Handed links may look interchangeable on a bench but provide different clearance at full lock or compression. Check whether new self-locking nuts, bushes, sleeves and washers are supplied.

A light knock over small alternating bumps is common when a link has clearance, but it is not proof. Inspect anti-roll-bar bushes, ball joints, control-arm bushes, strut mounts, dampers, springs, steering joints, brake hardware and exhaust shields. Test each link in the vehicle-specific suspension position: bar preload can hide movement, while a disconnected joint may feel tight yet be notchy. Split boots, rust staining or a stud moving in its mounting need prompt attention.

Raise and support the vehicle at approved points, control the suspension and keep fingers clear of a loaded anti-roll bar. Never work beneath a vehicle supported only by a jack. Counter-hold a designed hex or Torx feature while loosening the nut; do not grip the polished ball-stud surface or apply uncontrolled heat near boots, hoses, wiring or dampers. If both sides are lifted, note how that changes bar load.

Clean mounting faces, compare the old and new link and assemble bushes and washers in the specified order. Tighten fasteners at the stated suspension position; rubber-bushed designs may require normal ride height, whereas ball-jointed links follow their own procedure. Verify that boots are untwisted and that the link clears the tyre, brake hose and strut through full steering and travel. Anti-roll bar links listed below should restore a secure, freely articulating connection without being used to disguise damaged mounts or incorrect ride height.

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