July 3, 20178 yr Posted this the other day on another post: "I have a similar issue (shaking from side to side) on my 03 Forester and it is related to the rear lateral link bolt/knuckle interface. If you lift the wheel you can move the wheel sideways and see the aft end of the knuckle move around the lateral link bolt." Finally got around to fixing it the last few days. I knew the Knuckle was likely toast (Lateral Link bolt holes were egg shaped) so I bit the bullet and bought a new knuckle, bearing, hub, brake backing plate, seals, and of course the Lateral Link Bolt/Nut Washers/Bushings all from Subaru). I used a cut off disk to cut through the Lateral Link bolt and a propane torch to burn out the Lateral Link Bushings. Used a nut and bolt to pull in the new lateral link bushings after applying some silicone lubricant. Having read a number of posts over the years about how difficult the lateral link bolt/bushings were to get out I decided to bite the bullet and get all new stuff. Was not the cheapest way to get the job done but I know that it was done right with quality parts. The thing that helped was buying a wheel bearing from Subaru. The new ones have a bit of a reduction in the middle of the bearing making it easier to install. The cheap Chinese bearings do not have that feature. Chinese Ones Subaru Style I used my Harbor Freight bearing kit to install the new bearing and hub. Worked like a charm. Edited July 3, 20178 yr by Mike104
July 4, 20178 yr Author Test drive success!! Drove on the highway for a few exits making several lane changes and no shake and shimmy!! I love when a DIY fix works!
July 5, 20178 yr Author Still have a wheel bearing whine. Resident Subie tech confirmed it's the right rear bearing. Seems the most common failure on the Forester. Engineering/Racing friend suggested Titanium bolts to replace the Lateral Link bolt. www.ti64.com
July 6, 20178 yr Glad you got it sorted! If titanium isn't handy a liberal coating of anti-seize might help.
July 7, 20178 yr Author Glad you got it sorted! If titanium isn't handy a liberal coating of anti-seize might help. I covered that bad boy with anti-seize like butter on toast!
July 7, 20178 yr I wonder if for some of these things silicone dielectric grease wouldn't work better? I'm trying some out on my forester hatch latch.
July 7, 20178 yr Author I wonder if for some of these things silicone dielectric grease wouldn't work better? I'm trying some out on my forester hatch latch. I'm not sure anything other than removing that bolt every year cleaning and liberally applying anti seize isn't the option that works best for us that live in salt states. Guess I could move to the Southwest where it doesn't snow!
July 7, 20178 yr I've started using a good grade of marine grease instead of anti-seize. It seems to stay in place much better even on fasteners running in saltwater. The added bonus is, it doesn't seem to automatically GET ON EVERYTHING as soon as you open the bottle!!
July 8, 20178 yr Author I used to have access to anti-corrosion materials from aviation industry that would stick to anything forever MIL-PRF-16173 Grade 1But no longer do
July 8, 20178 yr @Mike104 That number comes up so it looks like anyone can buy it. Kinda pricey though
July 8, 20178 yr Author @Mike104 That number comes up so it looks like anyone can buy it. Kinda pricey though Yeah I used to be able to get leftovers from work, but that was a long time ago.
July 8, 20178 yr I have used both anti seize from NAPA and synthetic wheEl bearing grease and had good results in CT.
July 10, 20178 yr I work with a guy that used to work in a literal salt mine, underground, salt in air and high humidity. He said all the fancy crap they would use on electrical connections sucked compared to dielectric grease, so I'm giving it a try when a convenient test case comes along. I wouldn't say use it where actual lubrication is required, but if something just has to sit there and look pretty I'll give it a shot!
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