thehackmechanic
Well-Known Member
Anyone ever have a ball joint fail on their E9? In my book and presentations, I talk about "The Big Six" things that can cause a car to go from traveling happily down the road to dead on a ramp truck. They are cooling system issues, ignition issues, fuel delivery issues, charging issues, belts, and ball joints. Ball joints sort of are a forced fit into this list, but they are the part of the suspension/steering that receive most of the road pounding, and are the part that, if they fail, you lose control of the car, with the wheel folding under like a broken ankle. (google "ball joint failure." it's scary.)
Has anyone ever had one fail on an E9? In general, I've found ball joints on vintage BMWs to be extremely long-lived. Years back, I gave up replacing them prophylactically and only change them if there's obvious play or if the boots are ripped.
To wit, I'm about to take my E9 1200 miles to Virgina Beach and back (I'm speaking at the Coastal VA auto show on Saturday the 18th). I just crawled under the car to check it out, and found that the boot on the right ball joint is ripped. I've checked the joint by squeezing on it with big pliers and detect no play. I can't imagine that they're not the original control arms and ball joints; I've owned the car since 1986 and I've never changed them.
I'm trying to decide how much of my own advice to take and whether to move heaven and earth to get lower control arms with integrated ball joints delivered and installed before I leave.
--Rob
Has anyone ever had one fail on an E9? In general, I've found ball joints on vintage BMWs to be extremely long-lived. Years back, I gave up replacing them prophylactically and only change them if there's obvious play or if the boots are ripped.
To wit, I'm about to take my E9 1200 miles to Virgina Beach and back (I'm speaking at the Coastal VA auto show on Saturday the 18th). I just crawled under the car to check it out, and found that the boot on the right ball joint is ripped. I've checked the joint by squeezing on it with big pliers and detect no play. I can't imagine that they're not the original control arms and ball joints; I've owned the car since 1986 and I've never changed them.
I'm trying to decide how much of my own advice to take and whether to move heaven and earth to get lower control arms with integrated ball joints delivered and installed before I leave.
--Rob

