- Thread starter
- #26
flintoid
Proven Member
- 52
- 71
- Jun 16, 2022
-
Mattapoisett,
Massachusetts
The winter came with best intentions of doing the work to make this car safe and I did nothing because I’m a lazy POS. Warm weather hit and I was left wanting to drive the car with bad wheel bearings so the work ethic organically came back. I bought the parts for the wheel bearings/brakes and they sat past their return period. This left me with Rockauto mis-labeled Timkin rear wheel hubs and bearings (FWD models are actually AWD- and still MIUSA unlike the fronts that were correct) and Brembo brake pads that don’t fit Outlander front calipers.
I bought new outlander front calipers, matching pads (Bosch in place of the brembos), powerstop front and rear drilled and slotted rotors, Timkin front wheel hubs and bearings, SKF (made in Japan) rear wheel bearings and hubs, and some front sway bar tie rods as the old ones needed cut to remove the old suspension.
Somewhere along the lines of part hoarding I picked up some lightly used Tokico blues and springs. They’ll drop the car 1.5 inches, evidently. The struts/shocks were in great shape. And removing my old suspension I found it to be: factory and entirely blown out. It’s cool to see AGX parts with Mitsubishi part numbers on them!
“Since I am in here, I might as well…” drop the car with a new suspension. I’ve never pulled a cars suspension before. Having a Rusty Project Car made this a royal PITA. This forum was great in providing me motivation and advice from guys doing this back in 2006.
Next up: cut up my stainless 3 inch exhaust and install a Magnaflow muffler and thermal exhaust tip. Since Thermal doesn’t make GST exhausts anymore, I’ll have to fab up the “We Have Thermal Exhaust At Home” myself.









I bought new outlander front calipers, matching pads (Bosch in place of the brembos), powerstop front and rear drilled and slotted rotors, Timkin front wheel hubs and bearings, SKF (made in Japan) rear wheel bearings and hubs, and some front sway bar tie rods as the old ones needed cut to remove the old suspension.
Somewhere along the lines of part hoarding I picked up some lightly used Tokico blues and springs. They’ll drop the car 1.5 inches, evidently. The struts/shocks were in great shape. And removing my old suspension I found it to be: factory and entirely blown out. It’s cool to see AGX parts with Mitsubishi part numbers on them!
“Since I am in here, I might as well…” drop the car with a new suspension. I’ve never pulled a cars suspension before. Having a Rusty Project Car made this a royal PITA. This forum was great in providing me motivation and advice from guys doing this back in 2006.
Next up: cut up my stainless 3 inch exhaust and install a Magnaflow muffler and thermal exhaust tip. Since Thermal doesn’t make GST exhausts anymore, I’ll have to fab up the “We Have Thermal Exhaust At Home” myself.
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