Didn't want to start a new thread for this. Any professional service folks on here? What are your feeling about a customer who brings in the parts he/she wants replaced with the understanding there may be a higher shop rate applied for the labor? I occasionally have jobs I need done on my older cars where I have either no choice but to get used parts or have an overseas source for very hard to find parts. Some of the tasks are hard for me to do since a lift would be needed (or it's 12 below zero) and I'd like to have a shop do the work for me.
I wsh I had established a relationship with a good local shop, the only one I've ever used that was any good went out of business (retired).
Volvo Tie-rod play
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How To Replace Volvo Tie Rods
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MadeInJapan
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Just talk to them BEFORE bringing in your parts and explain everything to them. Some are willing to do this, but none that I know of will warranty the parts they put in.
'98 S70 T5 Emrld Grn Met/Beige Tons of Upgrades Mobil-1
'04 V70 2.5T Red/Taupe Some Upgrades Mobil-1
'07 S40 T5 AWD 6 speed manual! Silver/Black Stage1 Heico & Elevate
'07 S60 2.5T Blue/Taupe- my kid's Volvo
'04 V70 2.5T Red/Taupe Some Upgrades Mobil-1
'07 S40 T5 AWD 6 speed manual! Silver/Black Stage1 Heico & Elevate
'07 S60 2.5T Blue/Taupe- my kid's Volvo
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Mike850
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What is the best way to tell if you're tie rod needs replacement? How exactly do we define "play"? Mine will twist like it should but if I grip it and shake it there seems to be no "wiggle room". Is there a standard procedure for testing tie rods? Thanks.
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MadeInJapan
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It shouldn't wiggle either way.
'98 S70 T5 Emrld Grn Met/Beige Tons of Upgrades Mobil-1
'04 V70 2.5T Red/Taupe Some Upgrades Mobil-1
'07 S40 T5 AWD 6 speed manual! Silver/Black Stage1 Heico & Elevate
'07 S60 2.5T Blue/Taupe- my kid's Volvo
'04 V70 2.5T Red/Taupe Some Upgrades Mobil-1
'07 S40 T5 AWD 6 speed manual! Silver/Black Stage1 Heico & Elevate
'07 S60 2.5T Blue/Taupe- my kid's Volvo
I agree with what's been said on the "bringing the parts to the shop thing". Only time I've had to do this was on an old Subaru, and I did some shopping around. Found an independent shop willing to do the work, but they made me sign a waiver (for liability) on the basis that if they didn't provide the parts, they couldn't really guarantee anything out the door. Fair enough.Occasionally have jobs I need done on my older cars where I have either no choice but to get used parts or have an overseas source for very hard to find parts. Some of the tasks are hard for me to do since a lift would be needed (or it's 12 below zero) and I'd like to have a shop do the work for me.
They did charge me the same labor rate, though I thought the job (drive shaft and rear axle replacement) took longer than I anticipated. Maybe some "rounding up" going on, but you don't "bind the mouths of the kine that tread the grain."
And I -did- shop around. Several shops hung up on me. It helped that the car was 25ish years old, too - if it was an '04 Ford Focus or something easy to get parts for, I got the impression that the shop wouldn't have considered it. I think if you find a shop that's willing to work with you this way....hang on to them!
Regards -
Richard Perry
Richard Perry
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blackstarpower
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Does anyone know how to go about replacing the inner tie rods as well?
1998 V70 XC
I just did my tie rods and noticed this post. Although the original post is old, I've found we use these post regardless of age.
As you unscrew the tie rod from the inner or steering rod you need a way to remember its position so you can get the new part in approximately the same spot. Remember - alignment.
Most folks count the number of turns. Mine were 13 each side. You can also leave the tightening bolt in the same place or mark the specific Spot on the thread w/ wite-out or do all three.
Whatever its easy to do and gets the front end back where it was. Then get an alignment
As you unscrew the tie rod from the inner or steering rod you need a way to remember its position so you can get the new part in approximately the same spot. Remember - alignment.
Most folks count the number of turns. Mine were 13 each side. You can also leave the tightening bolt in the same place or mark the specific Spot on the thread w/ wite-out or do all three.
Whatever its easy to do and gets the front end back where it was. Then get an alignment
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JRL
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WHY?paulfr wrote:I just did my tie rods and noticed this post. Although the original post is old, I've found we use these post regardless of age.
As you unscrew the tie rod from the inner or steering rod you need a way to remember its position so you can get the new part in approximately the same spot. Remember - alignment.
Most folks count the number of turns. Mine were 13 each side. You can also leave the tightening bolt in the same place or mark the specific Spot on the thread w/ wite-out or do all three.
Whatever its easy to do and gets the front end back where it was. Then get an alignment
You ALWAYS do an alignment after a tie rod replacement so it doesn't/shouldn't really matter
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