I dont think this is supposed to look like that.. | Ford Explorer Forums

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I dont think this is supposed to look like that..

Daniel V

Member
Joined
November 1, 2018
Messages
24
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2
City, State
Tonasket WA
Year, Model & Trim Level
2000 Explorer XLT
Hey thanks for taking a look.

Noticed this under the front passenger side and I dont have knowledge past changing the oil haha.

Any idea what is going on here? Other side doesnt look like that thankfully.
20190202_143707.jpg
 



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radius arm bushing pushed through the crossmember,

that is a sorta nasty repair , needs a new crossmember and new bushings,,

i guess it's a shop repair for you,, it's kinda hard to do,,
 






Thanks for the reply.

Does this have the potential to put the vehicle out of commission if I dont act soon? It looks nasty to my untrained eye haha.
 












it's not going to fall apart, but i wouldn't drive it too much,, emergency only kinda,,
myself i would get it fixed quick as i could,,
 






Yup, in a nutshell, that is supposed to maintain the front/rear position for that front wheel. Since it is no longer doing that, the position is now dependent on parts of the suspension that are not designed for that task. I imagine you might be getting a wicked shimmy going over things like highway bumps, clunking during braking, other symptoms. Until this is fixed, you are at minimum accelerating wear on that tire, and the other bushings on that corner of the suspension system. Depending on the condition of the other parts, you could have a catastrophic failure, which... you know, if that wheel suddenly shifts back at highway speeds, you are going to have a very bad day.

If you can carry your toolbox with one hand, you are not going to be able to fix this yourself. Fortunately, this is not an overly difficult repair for a shop. A new bracket and bushings are maybe $200, I should think a well equipped shop could do this in a few hours... you will want to replace the bushings on the good side at the same time. I wouldn't put this off. The more you drive, the worse the tire wear will be, and the risk, of course, of an accident.
 






yikes, time to get that fixed.
The crossmember is held to the frame with large rivets, a 4" angle grinder will make short work of the rivets and they can be replaced with bolts
Plan a whole weekend if you are handy and want to tackle this job yourself.......do a search for radius arm bushings....yours have been gone for a LONG TIME
 






Ouch... I had to replace the bushings on mine too, along with the ball joints and it was terrible. Not an easy task.
 






The first time I did radius arm bushings it took 3 days with help
A year later I could do them in 3 hours myself
There was no internet back then :)
research is key and using the correct tools
 






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