I just bought this truck. The previous owner took it through its annual Pennsylvania state inspection, which it passed, but they told him the bushings were worn and would need replaced soon. I don’t know which one, but I’ll ask him if he knows.Buy factory arms if needed, they aren't that expensive.
But are they really worn? Light cracks on the rubber surface are no problem.
My 03 has been through 20 years and 339,000 miles of Pennsylvania of snow and salt as well. They look pretty rusty, but I've never had problems with bushings no passing inspection. If I was replacing the ones on that truck, I think I would choose to just replace all four control arms with new ones.My 2004 spent 17 years in Pennsylvania snow, ice and salt. The bottoms of my control arms rusted pretty bad.
New arms are dirt cheap. The big problem is the bolts get frozen in. Get all new hardware cause you are gonna use a sawzall.My 03 has been through 20 years and 339,000 miles of Pennsylvania of snow and salt as well. They look pretty rusty, but I've never had problems with bushings no passing inspection. If I was replacing the ones on that truck, I think I would choose to just replace all four control arms with new ones.
My new 05 truck has no rust, so I think the bushings may be easier to change out.
Definitely! As soon as we are out of the salt season, I will give it a really good washing underneath. Then, once we get into summer weather, it'll get washed thoroughly, dried and Fluid Filmed, or something similar. The 03 was 95% rust free after 20 years, so that's my plan for this one. I'm probably going to have the lower 8 or 10 inches of the cab, bed, doors, etc. Line-Xed as well. It really helped the 03. It's kind of expensive, but probably a good investment.You might want to consider to start to use Fluid Film right away on your rustfree Truck. Ore it will be rusty crusty by next year.
Would you go with OEM arms or aftermarket?New arms are dirt cheap. The big problem is the bolts get frozen in. Get all new hardware cause you are gonna use a sawzall.
All aftermarket I've seen are way inferior in quality to the OEMs.
https://www.moparpartsgiant.com/parts/mopar-arm-lower-control~52122009ab.html
And yes, this number fits your truck, no matter what.
I'll try to get a picture, but I don't want to mess with pulling the wheel off today in the rain.I'm just guessing but on a FL truck that was well kept the bolts might still come out just fine. Check ut before you spend a ton of money for these bolts that you maybe don't need.
And please post a picture of your arms and bushings that the DOT considered bad, I wanna see that because it's hard to imagine.
It says it doesn't fit, but I'll take your word for it. Do they sell a kit with all four?
Can I partially remove each bolt one at a time to see if they come out ok without screwing up the alignment? I can mark them beforehand. If I know they come out ok, I'll just order the bushings and do them all.
Yes you can, just remember the position of the adjuster and bring it back to the same position or close by. This setting isn't crazy important unlike the toe setting which must be spot on.