Below is picture of McGregor, my 2004 L322 passenger side rear shock. (My daughters named the car). Running it home down the highway I heard some noises and noticed the RR rear end starting to get a little squirrelly. Manged to get it home and lifted up and found the shock in the below condition. These are new shocks, maybe 10k miles on them. Somehow the shock came off the stud/bushing. The bolt and everything else was still there, straight and intact. I took the nut and bolt off and inserted the bushing back in the shock. I added a large washer to the outside of the busing inside the bolt head to prevent this from happening again. (looking up internet info, I noticed BMW X5 has such a washer, but RR does not).
I am unsure how this happened, but it may be that the bolt started to loosen and allowed enough play for it to slide off.
I have it back on the road and McGregor drives without noise or handling issues. Everything fit up nice, no metal parts were distorted. The rubber bushing showed some wear (maybe due to rubbing as it found its way off. Currently it is torqued to spec and looks "right".
That said - the deep thoughts I need are should I replace the unit? Specifically is the bushing attached to the shock barrel or does it slide rather freely in (as it does now)? Looking at the inner corrosion of the barrel it does not appear that it is a "hard" press as water and road salt clearly intruded. Or, it is possible the shock assembly was/is defective. There is no side to side play when the busing is inserted into the barrel before the bolt is inserted and tightened, but it goes in and out with minimal finger pressure. Impression?
I am unsure how this happened, but it may be that the bolt started to loosen and allowed enough play for it to slide off.
I have it back on the road and McGregor drives without noise or handling issues. Everything fit up nice, no metal parts were distorted. The rubber bushing showed some wear (maybe due to rubbing as it found its way off. Currently it is torqued to spec and looks "right".
That said - the deep thoughts I need are should I replace the unit? Specifically is the bushing attached to the shock barrel or does it slide rather freely in (as it does now)? Looking at the inner corrosion of the barrel it does not appear that it is a "hard" press as water and road salt clearly intruded. Or, it is possible the shock assembly was/is defective. There is no side to side play when the busing is inserted into the barrel before the bolt is inserted and tightened, but it goes in and out with minimal finger pressure. Impression?