drdex337 Posted August 23, 2013 Share Posted August 23, 2013 A few weeks ago my car was swallowed by a sinkhole, see post here. The damage was pretty extensive including two completely destroyed rims, a damaged front control arm, a sheared rear trailing arm and a bent rear subframe. Basically, it was enough damage to total the car. However, I have put lots of work into the car over the past year and the motor is in good shape, so I decided to buy the car back and do the work myself. I had gotten my feet wet a few weeks earlier replacing the front CV axle and wheel bearing, see post here . So I had some confidence to do the job. The one thing I told myself I'd need if I were going to undertake this job is some good tools. So the first thing I did was go to Sears and get myself a complete mechanic's tool set. I then debated getting an air compressor and some air tools but I realized that all I really needed was an impact gun. So I picked up an electric 8amp impact gun from Sears and it did the trick. I spent about 5-6 days replacing the rear subframe, trailing arm, strut and other things. This was easily the largest job I've ever done on a vehicle and I was pleasantly surprised at how easy (relatively speaking) the job was with the right tools. I ended up picking up some used WRX rims and tires and picked up the subframe and suspension parts from a junkyard so that kept my costs low. All of the specialty tools I needed like an axle puller, ball joint separator, 32mm socket, breaker bar, and torque wrench were rented from Auto Zone. The Auto Zone tool rental policy is really helpful if you've never used it before. The only really difficult part of the build was physically dropping and raising the subframe which I did using ropes tied to the subframe. Other than that I didn't really have any issues. I got everything back together and took it to an alignment shop but unfortunately it turned out that the front strut was bent as well. So after replacing the strut (and strut mount), I got it back to the alignment shop and it aligned perfectly! So I think I can chalk this one up as a win. Below is the write-up of the subframe drop along with the gallery of images. PM/reply with comments or questions. Link to the full write-up Link to the image gallery Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JmP6889928 Posted August 23, 2013 Share Posted August 23, 2013 Kudos to you OP for seizing the initiative and tackling this job. Nothing cooler than someone seeing their car for what it's really worth and deciding that rather than hang their head and giving up, going ahead and just fixing it and learning a lot in the process. That was a pretty major repair and it sounds like you took your time, made sure that you did everything correctly, and the results show. ^5 to you for a job well done. P.S. Post photos in this thread. Many people would really love to just see what you did rather than having to follow a link. If they're reading this on a mobile phone, they can't follow the links very well, so photos would help. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MikeC5 Posted August 28, 2013 Share Posted August 28, 2013 I second that! Nice work. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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