CAJUNLAWYER
Member
I certainly hope so-otherwise there are gonna be a lot of dings handed outAre we still talking about truck parts here?![]()

I certainly hope so-otherwise there are gonna be a lot of dings handed outAre we still talking about truck parts here?![]()
Well, she's a 1999 Suburban with 367,500 miles. I don't think I've had anything done on the ball joints before today. These are easy miles mind you, no off-roading with a little boat towing and some launch ramp work thrown in.. But I always launch the boat from the rear hitch so the ball joints have never gotten wet.
As all have said, your ball joints owe you nothing. Period. I don't think any cars or light trucks past the 60's have had ball joints with grease fittings.
Well, she's a 1999 Suburban with 367,500 miles. I don't think I've had anything done on the ball joints before today.
I fixed the doors last yearGood God Caj, You have nothing to complain about. 367,500 miles on a Suburban & all you need is ball joints? Most Suburbans of that vintage don't have doors that haven't fallen off.
Were your balljoints "lubed for life" or were they greaseable?
Greaseable balljoints last much longer (when properly maintained) than the "lubed for life" type in my experience. I've had some go over 175K. I've had some that were "lubed for life" that didn't see 100K.
How lond are ball joints suposed to last.
I would say that as lond as you drease them redurally, they will last a lond, lond time.![]()
I would say that as lond as you drease them redurally, they will last a lond, lond time.![]()
Every GM truck I had the ball joints never lasted long. When I lived in NH I had a brand new truck where the ball joints didn't pass inspection with 48 miles on the truck. Replaced with Monore and had grease fittings put in them. Never had any problems with longevity ever since. My Ford pick ups always had grease fittings installed not an issue. But Cajun had 387K miles on his...I think he got his money worth out of those ball joints.
Were your balljoints "lubed for life" or were they greaseable?
Greaseable balljoints last much longer (when properly maintained) than the "lubed for life" type in my experience. I've had some go over 175K. I've had some that were "lubed for life" that didn't see 100K.
I've had to do mine on my Super Duty twice, and am just now at 200k miles. Consider yourself fortunate![]()