I need to replace the rear swaybar bushings on my 06 unlimited. I being told that I can't replace the bushings in the links, I have to replace the entire arm. Opinion anyone?
Thank you, yup that's the one I looked at. I can get Moog links for like $15 each complete, 2 part bushings with all the hardware.
Also available in red; fancy.
Thanks again, ya when I grab the swaybar it moves inside the bushings at the axle pretty sloppy. Since I'm there I might as well do the link's too.Also available in red; fancy.
Just looking at the kit I would venture that you might be able to install it by rigging up something with one of these bad boys.
View attachment 157117
But then again I havn't actually done it.
Depending on how bad the links are you could get away with just the sway bar bushings and not the link bushings. (if you choose to do so I bought the Moog bushings for the front and they are great).
Many advocate that the rear sway bar isn't that essential anyway.
Decisions, decisions.
I just installed the Moog bushings and links. Only tricky part was getting the bushings on to the bar. A little dish soap helps.Thank you, yup that's the one I looked at. I can get Moog links for like $15 each complete, 2 part bushings with all the hardware.
I'll just go that route.
I hesitated to do the Moog bushings because they're the polyurethane (blue) instead of their premium rubber (black). I haven't driven it enough to know if it will be an issue. But compared to the old ones that had dried up and allowed the bar to move inside, I'm hoping it will be an improvement.
If you’re saying yours are tight still, I’m glad to hear it. That was my goal in replacing my stock ones.I replaced the rear rubber on mine with poly years ago. For a sway bar, I don't see where poly vs rubber matters. You want a tight connection that will last a while. After that, I don't know what else to argue over.![]()
