Recently replaced mineThey are not. In fact, I think this is the cause of the "bump steer" as what some people are experiencing when pushing the car hard on track especially with sticky tyres.
Speedengineering - a german engineering company that frequents the Nurburgring highlighted the soft rear subframe bushings are the issue which makes the rear axle less predictable than it should when pushing hard on track. They highly recommend solid bushes in place of the factory soft ones even on a stock car.
I think these are the diff mount bushings. The ones I'm referring to are the 4 large ones surrounding the entire subframe to the body of the car.Recently replaced mine
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Another member who changed his?
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The ones we bought
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It didn’t say bushings plural so I bought two boxes, 4 bushing total, lol. Now I have 2 extra.
You are absolutely right. Thanks for clarifying Errol!I think these are the diff mount bushings. The ones I'm referring to are the 4 large ones surrounding the entire subframe to the body of the car.
I'm sure the ones you posted are a good change as well as i can clearly see one of y'all have already torn the factory one. ?
I’ve got some but haven’t put them in yet. How’s the ride & noise difference?I went to solid ones. But they are not easy to change. Here are a few pics.
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If you buy one new std bolt and measure the under head length against a removed one you will be able to tell if it's a TTY bolt. Generally TTY bolts have a preset torque and then to an angle. A lot of bolts called for replacement in the manual these days aren't due to being TTY fasteners but because they have factory thread locker applied to them. They don't trust dealer techs to apply locking compound so they call for the fasteners to be binned after removal and new ones fitted.Yeah, you're not kidding about them being tight! We got a set of Verklines rear spring wishbone bushings squeezed in after doing the Powerflex differential mount ones.
Rear Spring Wishbone Bushings with lockout kit Toyota Supra A90 A91 – Verkline USA
However, wasn't as successful with the rear knuckle bushings. Will tackle that another time.
Rear Knuckle Bushings Toyota Supra A90 A91 – Verkline USA
Another question for the subframe gurus - assume it's best to change the bolts after dropping the subframe more than once. Especially if they are torque to yield. I started looking up the part numbers to replace them. Then saw Verkline's subframe. They come with the bolts and might be more conducive/ flexible/ easier for inspecting & replacing parts (such as bushing, lol).
Rear Lightweight Tubular Subframe Toyota Supra A90 A91 – Verkline USA
Any thoughts or feedback on it?
Thx Phil & why I just want to buy em & replace em. Master Fuzz @FuzzyRev might know which parts I need to order. What I found so far:If you buy one new std bolt and measure the under head length against a removed one you will be able to tell if it's a TTY bolt. Generally TTY bolts have a preset torque and then to an angle. A lot of bolts called for replacement in the manual these days aren't due to being TTY fasteners but because they have factory thread locker applied to them. They don't trust dealer techs to apply locking compound so they call for the fasteners to be binned after removal and new ones fitted.
Phil
For fuck's sake, never re-use TTY bolts!Another question for the subframe gurus - assume it's best to change the bolts after dropping the subframe more than once. Especially if they are torque to yield.
Oh hey I was looking at these, how's the NVH afterword? I was considering doing these as well as the subframe inserts.Recently replaced mine
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Another member who changed his?
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The ones we bought
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It didn’t say bushings plural so I bought two boxes, 4 bushing total, lol. Now I have 2 extra.