Using car without strut braces. Ok or not OK?

wiganz4

Member
Been going thru some suspension refresh and final bit is strut braces clunking. Driving me crazy but after renewing nuts and torquing to spec it's still doing it. Removing them all together solves the issue so it's definitely them causing it.

Question is, is it ok to drive (and I drive carefully plus the car's a 2.0) without these on until I get hold of a pair to fit in hope to solve the issue?
 
Been going thru some suspension refresh and final bit is strut braces clunking. Driving me crazy but after renewing nuts and torquing to spec it's still doing it. Removing them all together solves the issue so it's definitely them causing it.

Question is, is it ok to drive (and I drive carefully plus the car's a 2.0) without these on until I get hold of a pair to fit in hope to solve the issue?
The fact that they clunk when fitted should be telling you how much stress is being passed through them.
That’s a no from me.
Forget the torque to spec theory. Every chance your torque wrench isn’t accurate anyway.
Tighten them up as much as you can.
 
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They are structural to the car and need to be in place when driving the car, give them some more tightening till the noise is gone.
 
I would go along the tighten em up and don't bin a structural part of the car route but also think maybe the rigidity they provide is enough to expose another problem such as worn bushes or loose nuts etc elsewhere down the line. Also it's not uncommon for the tops of shock towers to crack, enjoy the chase. :thumbsup:
 
I would go along the tighten em up and don't bin a structural part of the car route but also think maybe the rigidity they provide is enough to expose another problem such as worn bushes or loose nuts etc elsewhere down the line. Also it's not uncommon for the tops of shock towers to crack, enjoy the chase. :thumbsup:

Just had a look at the sway bar bushes. They aren't perished, and the handling seems fine but I can jerk them up and down slightly by hand so I'm presuming after new drop links being fitted it's taken any play out of the set-up and the noise is resonating thru the strut mount and into the hollow brace bars. Ordered some to fit next week. Probably should of done these at the same time as the drop links. Every day's a school day eh!
 
Just had a look at the sway bar bushes. They aren't perished, and the handling seems fine but I can jerk them up and down slightly by hand so I'm presuming after new drop links being fitted it's taken any play out of the set-up and the noise is resonating thru the strut mount and into the hollow brace bars. Ordered some to fit next week. Probably should of done these at the same time as the drop links. Every day's a school day eh!
Assuming you have actually done the obvious and tightened the strut braces more?
 
Assuming you have actually done the obvious and tightened the strut braces more?

Oh yeah. New flange nuts and cleaned the contact surfaces. That's why I ruled it out that it was them at fault in the end. They're acting like amplifiers and also the shock goes thru them to hit the firewall. Hopefully this is the solution.......but ya never know with these things! 😂

BTW you said there's a chance my torque wrench won't be accurate anyway. What makes you think that?
 
What are the apparent torque specs for a strut brace, out of interest? The size of the socket needed to do it up will also give a clue towards the torque.

Don't read too much into the inaccuracy of a torque wrench comment - even the most expensive wrenches won't be 100% accurate, all will be +/- 2% or something. To be 100% accurate it would have to calibrated every year.
 
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