Introduction
Your car's suspension system is responsible for ride comfort, handling, and safety. A well-maintained suspension keeps your tyres in contact with the road and ensures your vehicle responds predictably to steering inputs. In this guide, we cover everything you need to know about suspension maintenance.
How the Suspension System Works
The suspension system connects your vehicle's body to its wheels. It absorbs road shocks through springs and dampers (shock absorbers), while control arms, ball joints, and bushings maintain wheel alignment and allow controlled movement. When any of these components wear out, ride quality, handling, and tyre wear all suffer.
Signs Your Suspension Needs Attention
- Excessive bouncing after hitting a bump
- Vehicle pulling to one side during braking
- Uneven tyre wear
- Clunking or knocking noises over bumps
- Vehicle sitting lower on one corner
- Difficulty steering or vague steering feel
Key Suspension Components to Inspect
Shock Absorbers and Struts
Shock absorbers dampen spring oscillations to keep your tyres on the road. Test them by pushing down firmly on each corner of the vehicle — it should rebound once and settle. If it bounces multiple times, the shocks are worn and need replacement.
Ball Joints
Ball joints connect the control arms to the steering knuckles. Worn ball joints cause clunking noises and imprecise steering. Jack up the vehicle and check for play by grabbing the tyre at 12 and 6 o'clock and rocking it — any movement indicates worn ball joints.
Control Arm Bushings
Rubber bushings cushion the connection between control arms and the vehicle frame. Worn bushings cause clunking, poor handling, and accelerated tyre wear. Inspect for cracking, splitting, or excessive movement.
Sway Bar Links and Bushings
The sway bar (anti-roll bar) reduces body roll during cornering. Worn sway bar links and bushings cause rattling noises over bumps and increased body roll.
Wheel Bearings
Worn wheel bearings produce a humming or grinding noise that changes with vehicle speed. Jack up the vehicle and spin each wheel by hand — any roughness or noise indicates a worn bearing.
Suspension Maintenance Tips
- Have wheel alignment checked annually or after hitting a large pothole
- Rotate tyres every 10,000 km to promote even wear
- Inspect suspension components during every brake service
- Replace worn components in pairs (both sides) for balanced handling
- Use quality replacement parts for safety-critical suspension components
Tools for Suspension Work
Suspension work requires a good socket set, torque wrench, pry bars, ball joint separator, and spring compressor for strut work. At YATEXAUTO, we supply all the professional tools you need for safe and efficient suspension maintenance.
Conclusion
Regular suspension maintenance keeps your vehicle safe, comfortable, and handling at its best. Inspect your suspension components regularly and address worn parts promptly. Browse YATEXAUTO's tool collection to equip your workshop for professional suspension work.