I had a mechanic replace the transmission input seal on my '98 V70R (with ~185,000 miles), and while he was at it, install a set of poly subframe bushings and a pair of new front and rear AWD sway bars and HD end links from IPD.
Now, I know this car is a few hundred pounds heavier and a different layout from my 940 (also with IPD sways), but it seems much more... nervous. Taking tight curves at moderate speed leads to my tires complaining, and they squeal loudly if I take the at higher-than-moderate speeds.
The tires are Continental ExtremeContact DWS, installed by the previous owner; they have around 24,000 miles on them. My 940 (which I'm using solely as a handling comparison) has nearly-new Hankook Ventus s1 Noble2 tires, and shows no sign of squealing or losing lateral traction going through the same curves at higher speeds.
The AWD works correctly, and it's got fairly recent Bilstein TCs up front and Nivomats in the back. The spring seats and front and rear shock mounts were replaced ~22k miles ago, and the control arms were replaced ~27k miles ago.
This came to a head the other day, when I took a very sharp uphill curve on a rural road at ~5-10 mph higher than its signed speed, and the rear wheels entirely broke loose, leading to screaming tires, the rear end coming over the line, and me pointing a number of degrees further inside the curve than I meant to. I corrected, but this isn't the kind of behavior I'd like from my car. The 940 feels like it's on rails going through the same curves that the V70R threatens to throw me out of.
Can I chalk this up to any of the following:
- Worn tires - seems a bit severe for just this
- Alignment issue
- Natural behavior of a V70R with sway bars
- Improper sway bar installation - I have noticed a clanking noise from the front left side going over bumps
- Other worn suspension components?







