front end "clunk?"
#21
Legacy TMS Member
Way back in 2006 my new 2006 GT had the clunk and after a couple of years I replaced the strut mounts with 8R3Z-18183-B Upper Mount Assembly (2 req’d). Never had a clunk after that. Still good today.
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Buckshot Barry (6/28/18)
#22
I know this thread is older than dirt, and people have moved on to newer rides. But my clunk cure was different. New this, new that, proved nothing but spending on needless parts. The last thing was new front stabilizer bushings, they are poly stock bushing from Ford parts giant. They slide on the bar with some resistants but not enough for my liking,end result was CLUNK. I came to the conclusion the bushing were the culprit. I got some HDPE 3/16 thick 2x2. I loosened the swaybar and slid the shim behind the bushing and torqued it down. End result NO MORE CLUNK. Either Ford is calling out the wrong bushing for the bar or it is **** poor engineering. Now I look for bumps to ride over, and enjoy the quiet ride.
I think that if the bushings were made of rubber it may have absorbed some of the sound. But who am I to judge? I'm just a 68yo retired motor head.
I think that if the bushings were made of rubber it may have absorbed some of the sound. But who am I to judge? I'm just a 68yo retired motor head.
#23
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Buckshot Barry (8/7/18)
#24
I recently purchased a 2008 Mustang 4.0 Coupe Deluxe for my daughter's first car. It had 115k miles on it. From the Carfax and my personal inspection, it has turned out to be exactly what I was hoping it to be, an all original car that had no history of major mechanical issues. It was just driven by previous owners who had to do nothing to it. I wanted to be the one who performed the first maintenance on it. It had the original serpentine belt, spark plugs, fuel filter filled with very dark brown mirk, totally flat shocks, springs and struts, cloth seats, complete with drivers side hole in the lower outside back rest and totally glazed over headlights. In other words, a perfect car that had never been messed with by a wannabe teen age mechanic.
This forum helped me find the "clunk" in the front end. I read where someone suggested that the fastest, easiest and cheapest first step in the process of elimination is to remove the front stabilizer bar. I removed it and wa-la...no more clunk. Someone had placed a plastic shim behind the passenger side mounting clamp in an attempt to stop the "clunk." That was the first and only shade tree fix that the car had. New bushings are on the way.
This forum helped me find the "clunk" in the front end. I read where someone suggested that the fastest, easiest and cheapest first step in the process of elimination is to remove the front stabilizer bar. I removed it and wa-la...no more clunk. Someone had placed a plastic shim behind the passenger side mounting clamp in an attempt to stop the "clunk." That was the first and only shade tree fix that the car had. New bushings are on the way.
#25
I made a YouTube video that addresses all the different sources a front end clunk can be coming from. I have a lot of experience with these issues in S197 mustangs so I hope this video helps people:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8B8X8...ature=youtu.be
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8B8X8...ature=youtu.be
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#26
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Location: Massachusetts
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thanks for posting!
#27
SUPERCHARGED RED ROCKET ------------------Master-Moderator
I made a YouTube video that addresses all the different sources a front end clunk can be coming from. I have a lot of experience with these issues in S197 mustangs so I hope this video helps people:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8B8X8...ature=youtu.be
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8B8X8...ature=youtu.be
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