> I think my 98.5 A4 2.8Q needs new struts at 102,000 miles. The rear
> tires have excessive wear on the inside of the tread (the car had a
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> struts in November, when I swap out my summer wheels and put on the
> winter wheels and would appreciate suggestions.
>You could try to check for bad bushings in the rear suspension by pushing the
>top of the rear tire in and out to look for play in the system. If there is no
>play I would suspect the alignment you had done being incorrect before worn struts.
Thanks for this tip; I'll share it with my mechanic of 15+ years
who'll be doing the job. We didn't find loose bearings, but he didn't
check for bushings as far as I know. If the alignment was done
incorrectly, I'll be really pissed off because the nearby Audi
independent did it. I have been thinking they're somewhat fraudulent,
just a smidge cheaper than the dealer, and always seem to cost me a
lot of money, unlike my mechanic.
A case in point is my recent rear brake job, for which the independent
wanted to charge me about $350 for rotors and pads and possibly
another $250 to replace one stuck caliper. My mechanic did the job
for $100 less and unstuck the caliper, lubricating it for continued
service. I'm gonna have him do the next timing belt/water
pump/tensioner job in 20k miles instead of going to the independent
ripoff artists.
So you're suggesting that I just do another alignment before replacing
any struts?
>> I think my 98.5 A4 2.8Q needs new struts at 102,000 miles. The rear
>> tires have excessive wear on the inside of the tread (the car had a
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>> struts in November, when I swap out my summer wheels and put on the
>> winter wheels and would appreciate suggestions.
Tony - 26 Aug 2006 21:37 GMT
If the only reason you are thinking of replacing the struts is tire wear, yes, I
would recommend alignment first.
Still, you should check for bad bushings because if they are bad an alignment is
worthless. The system needs to be tight before an alignment is done.
>>You could try to check for bad bushings in the rear suspension by pushing the
>>top of the rear tire in and out to look for play in the system. If there is no
[quoted text clipped - 28 lines]
>>>struts in November, when I swap out my summer wheels and put on the
>>>winter wheels and would appreciate suggestions.
KLS - 27 Aug 2006 15:16 GMT
>If the only reason you are thinking of replacing the struts is tire wear, yes, I
>would recommend alignment first.
>
>Still, you should check for bad bushings because if they are bad an alignment is
>worthless. The system needs to be tight before an alignment is done.
Okay, thanks for this suggestion.
One last question: do struts on these cars simply not die? Or,
what's the basic life expectancy of struts on A4Qs?
>>>You could try to check for bad bushings in the rear suspension by pushing the
>>>top of the rear tire in and out to look for play in the system. If there is no
[quoted text clipped - 28 lines]
>>>>struts in November, when I swap out my summer wheels and put on the
>>>>winter wheels and would appreciate suggestions.
Tony - 28 Aug 2006 05:13 GMT
Sure they fail by loosing there dampening resistance or developing bad strut
bearings but they usually last well over 120K and even a lot more. That isn't to
say that yours couldn't be in need of repair but that is just not the first
thing I would suspect.
>>If the only reason you are thinking of replacing the struts is tire wear, yes, I
>>would recommend alignment first.
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>>>>>struts in November, when I swap out my summer wheels and put on the
>>>>>winter wheels and would appreciate suggestions.
KLS - 28 Aug 2006 13:45 GMT
Thanks, Tony, we'll double check those strut bearings and the
dampening resistance.
>Sure they fail by loosing there dampening resistance or developing bad strut
>bearings but they usually last well over 120K and even a lot more. That isn't to
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>>>>>>struts in November, when I swap out my summer wheels and put on the
>>>>>>winter wheels and would appreciate suggestions.