Funny you mentioned that. Yes, they were still there. One had green paint while the other had pink paint. They were a pain to get the claws back in place. I guess for now, I'll search for new upper arms and balance the tires. Thanks for the info.
Pretty sure thy were seated correctly and put em back the way they were. I'm assuming the colors are different adjustment rates... Is there a standard for which color goes where... If I remember, pink was in front and green on the back bracket. It really isn't that noticeable but I know how it used to run. Just the slightest side to side motion on the highway when she should be rolling straight. Maybe the tighter shocks/springs has just enhanced an already out of aligned front end. It's the wife's daily driver and I don't drive it had often. I'm sure there have been injured curbs. As far as I know with 130K miles it has only been aligned once when under warranty at about 90K when one of the upper arms was replaced due to a torn boot. Probably time to get it checked anyway. Gonna get everything balanced tomorrow and double check those busing plates.
Also searching on eBay for some upper arms. Found a few sets for under $100. Just don't know about the quality. These may be fine but without the boots they're destined to fail sooner with all that grit getting in there.
Well, a little closer... Took it in for balancing and discovered both fronts have odd uneven wear on the inside edges. That would explain the rocking. Front end is fighting. Now just gotta figure out what's worn out... Tie rod ends along with upper arms? Guess I should get it off the ground and rattle some more. Wouldn't mere misalignment have uniform wear all the way around on inside or outside edges? This was definitely patchy high and low spots. They said they thought it was separation at first but apparently wasn't. I had even noticed the wear before.
Hi thanks, thats what I did, was very helpful, except their strut just slid in easily without having to separate the UCA, hence me initially thinking the part was incorrect. Thats why I thought I would post in case someone else watched that video and worried as I did, thanks.Go search for the videos from 1AAuto on these struts for the 2003 explorer and it will help you tremendously
yesterday I installed two new Monroe Quick Strut on my Ex and here is the pics. I hope this helps anyone who attempts this and it was anything but "quick"
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yeah here it is
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and thats what it looks like
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heres the old one
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Remove this bottom bolt from this side, here ford did something to help me, the nut on the other side has a tab attached to it that locks it to the frame as you loosen or tighten in, thank you ford
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Remove the 3 nuts from the top
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and its out, came right out a little lean and twist like a puzzle and it slid right out
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Look Mom NO STRUT
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Insert strut like so
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Heres where the fun begins, it doesnt go in like it came out, the quick strut base is a little thicker than the factory and it doesnt clear the top. I placed another jack to raise the arm to a point that allowed the strut to clear, than shoved it back. once in place it was now longer than would line up with bottom hole. I put a spring compressor on it in place and was able to line up the bottom which needed a jack at the bottom of the strut to convince it in to place as the new rubber bushing made it difficult
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and its in.
Roob