Do Sway bars wear out
Do Sway bars wear out
I was talking to a group of guys and a couple stated that sway bars wear out and need replacement. I have a driver 69 442. I have replaced the front bushings and parts, I have never considered the sway bar itself, front or rear, being bad. Should I. It hasn't crashed, so they aren't beat up any more than normal wear for a car that old. Thanks
They probably do, but very unlikely they'll wear out in normal everyday around-town & highway driving unless accompanied by extremes in temperature (huge variances and great frequencies of these huge variances), corrosion (salt & the like, etc.), extreme & repeated stress. One area I managed in the USAF (you'll find the exact same methods employed in civil aviation) was aircraft isochronal inspections which include several types of NDI (Non Destructive Inspections). These inspections are critical to the analysis of many systems of an aircraft and the ability to predict problems (these types of inspections are key to many other devices, as well). You can think of a simple SOAP inspection as a form of an NDI. At any rate, you can lookup isochronal inspections, NDI, etc. and find significant amounts of literature. Bottom line is I doubt a normal sway bar (in particular a solid sway bar as opposed to a hollow sway bar) will require replacement based upon normal driving conditions. If you're punching a car through radically extreme cornering and/or drag strip hole shots on a very regular basis I'm sure there's some wearing occurring with greater frequency.
You probably should hear from an engineer specializing in metals. Bars that have been distorted in crashes, exposed to intense fire, suffered severe corrosion, etc. probably would need replacement. Springs and torsion bars sometime lose their torsional capabilities with age. They are likely exposed to greater torsional loads than the sway bars. My "guess" is that bars used on street driven vehicles in normal circumstances wouldn't need replacement.
The sway bars are just mild steel, no different from the frame or rear axle housing or suspension arms. Other than minimal wear where the bushings and end links attach, there is no wear. Metal DOES fatigue due to cyclical loading, but unless the part in question had an inherent flaw that grew, you'll never see fatigue failure in normal driving. That's a long way of saying "no".
You probably should hear from an engineer specializing in metals. Bars that have been distorted in crashes, exposed to intense fire, suffered severe corrosion, etc. probably would need replacement. Springs and torsion bars sometime lose their torsional capabilities with age. They are likely exposed to greater torsional loads than the sway bars. My "guess" is that bars used on street driven vehicles in normal circumstances wouldn't need replacement.
The sway bars are just mild steel, no different from the frame or rear axle housing or suspension arms. Other than minimal wear where the bushings and end links attach, there is no wear. Metal DOES fatigue due to cyclical loading, but unless the part in question had an inherent flaw that grew, you'll never see fatigue failure in normal driving. That's a long way of saying "no".
You might want to check the sway bar in another 50 years.
.....Just my two cents worth.
https://www.google.com/search?q=brok...w=1920&bih=976
Corrosion isn't "wear" any more than rust on the frame or body is "wear". Sure, if rust thins the metal, it can and will lead to failure. This isn't "wearing out" any more than rust on the bottoms of your front fenders is "wearing out". It's rust.
It isn't wearing out as what might normally be construed as metal fatigue due to stress (in and of itself w/ all other factors being equal and not influencing metal fatigue). None-the-less, it does demonstrate where sway bars have worn and broken as the result of extenuating (external) factors such as water, salt, etc. - which, I would argue, does increase the wearing of the metal. I would further argue, corrosion is a form of "wear" - in particular when two dissimilar metals contact each other yielding to corrosion. That is the fundamental and basic operation of corrosive properties. The rapidity of transferring ions between dissimilar metals increases corrosion - the fundamentals of any Redox equation.
Sorry, but I have to disagree. "Wearing out" implies failure due to normal use - either from fatigue failure of the metal due to normal cyclical loading or from relative motion between parts. If your cylinder walls have to be bored oversize after 100,000 miles, that's wear. If they have to be bored because they have rust pits from sitting around in humidity, that is NOT wear.
Understood. For the sake of eliminating a perpetual diatribe regarding useful definitions of "wear", I'll concede what you describe (above - cylinder walls having to be bored) as abrasion wear. What I describe as wear (regarding the Redox potential of two dissimilar metals) as corrosive wear. Both, IMO, are forms of "wear".
Understood. For the sake of eliminating a perpetual diatribe regarding useful definitions of "wear", I'll concede what you describe (above - cylinder walls having to be bored) as abrasion wear. What I describe as wear (regarding the Redox potential of two dissimilar metals) as corrosive wear. Both, IMO, are forms of "wear". 

Corrosion on to components rubbing together can contribute to excessive wear. Such as the bushing areas. But I submit that the wear is so slow, it's like getting round rocks out of the river beds. They wore down SLOWLY over a long amount of TIME.
But unless something was wildly out of alignment or excessive corrosion to eat away something, normal wear and tear just keeps the metal contact areas with the rubber bits clean, shiny and smooth. That's about the extent of the wear even after decades. It's probably more likely you'll see the dreaded lip seal wear groove on your harmonic balancer than you will seeing the sway bar fall out from under the car because it wore out.
I agree, maybe 50 years from now, that same sway bar with the same rate of use may be wore slap out. But I'll be wore slap out before that, so I think you're good.
But unless something was wildly out of alignment or excessive corrosion to eat away something, normal wear and tear just keeps the metal contact areas with the rubber bits clean, shiny and smooth. That's about the extent of the wear even after decades. It's probably more likely you'll see the dreaded lip seal wear groove on your harmonic balancer than you will seeing the sway bar fall out from under the car because it wore out.
I agree, maybe 50 years from now, that same sway bar with the same rate of use may be wore slap out. But I'll be wore slap out before that, so I think you're good.
It's really not a question of conceding, nor is it a poll-able question. Mechanical wear and metal fatigue is not corrosion, galvanic reaction, embrittlement from radiation, or etching from battery acid. These things have precise engineering definitions.
All that being said, I doubt you would cold work a sway bar to any sort of performance problem. A loose connection might deform the mounting holes, but you would lose the bushings in the hold down clamps long before fatigue.
All that being said, I doubt you would cold work a sway bar to any sort of performance problem. A loose connection might deform the mounting holes, but you would lose the bushings in the hold down clamps long before fatigue.
Mark Donahue wrote about skid-pad testing of race cars in his autobiography. He describes a car that had excellent handling for a couple of laps, and then began to not hold the steering input. They determined that the sway bars were improperly heat treated, the material was yielding instead of maintaining proper tension. (The bar was bending and losing spring tension.) An upgraded heat-treatment of the replacement parts solved the problem.
Do sway bars wear out? Not typically. Can they be over-extended and bend? Sure, but again not common. Can they be subject to metal fatigue? Again, yes, but it's not something that folks see a lot of. MOSTLY, automotive sway bars are as reliable as the sun coming up. The rubber bushings that hold them in place are NOT.
I worked for a company that built City Buses. There is a Federally-recognized, State-sponsored Bus testing facility nominally based in Altoona, PA. The specially-developed test tracks are outside State College PA.. Our company's bus was being tested, must have been 1993. They drive it up and down the test track, potholes, speed-bumps, elevation changes, left turns, right turns 24 hours a day, until the bus breaks. Then they report the failure and wait for parts to be shipped so they can fix the bus and resume testing. One of the problem areas was sway-bar breakage. I was sent to State College to look into the problem, and to "light a fire" under the testing folks. I looked at the pile of broken sway bars, they all broke in the same place, they all looked like fatigue failures, the bars all broke at the usual 45 degree angle, with the usual "beachhead" marks. I was sending photos and descriptions back to the Engineering department. They told me "don't bother" we break sway bars all the time at the test track, but never on buses in revenue service (actual on-the-road, passenger-carrying use.) Evidently, the "torture track" was a little too much torture!
https://www.altoonabustest.psu.edu/index.aspx
Do sway bars wear out? Not typically. Can they be over-extended and bend? Sure, but again not common. Can they be subject to metal fatigue? Again, yes, but it's not something that folks see a lot of. MOSTLY, automotive sway bars are as reliable as the sun coming up. The rubber bushings that hold them in place are NOT.
I worked for a company that built City Buses. There is a Federally-recognized, State-sponsored Bus testing facility nominally based in Altoona, PA. The specially-developed test tracks are outside State College PA.. Our company's bus was being tested, must have been 1993. They drive it up and down the test track, potholes, speed-bumps, elevation changes, left turns, right turns 24 hours a day, until the bus breaks. Then they report the failure and wait for parts to be shipped so they can fix the bus and resume testing. One of the problem areas was sway-bar breakage. I was sent to State College to look into the problem, and to "light a fire" under the testing folks. I looked at the pile of broken sway bars, they all broke in the same place, they all looked like fatigue failures, the bars all broke at the usual 45 degree angle, with the usual "beachhead" marks. I was sending photos and descriptions back to the Engineering department. They told me "don't bother" we break sway bars all the time at the test track, but never on buses in revenue service (actual on-the-road, passenger-carrying use.) Evidently, the "torture track" was a little too much torture!
https://www.altoonabustest.psu.edu/index.aspx
Last edited by Schurkey; Feb 27, 2020 at 11:11 PM.
Wearing out, well not exactly.
Some cars had hollow bars and water would get inside of them and rot them out from the inside.
Also keep in mind that the older the car, the more rust and rot it could have.
I did replace the front sway bar on my Delta about 2-3 years ago now. Bar was actually for a 70-81 Camaro and I picked up a brace bar for a 75-77 Cutlass (i think, could be the 73-74 Cutlass but I'm 99% sure it was for a 75-77) All UMI stuff
Both were a direct swap as well as the stock ZQ8 S-10 bump stops I installed. None of these parts I replaced were broken or rotted out and the car was over 30 years old. The end links, well they snapped the second I applied a little force to them
Some cars had hollow bars and water would get inside of them and rot them out from the inside.
Also keep in mind that the older the car, the more rust and rot it could have.
I did replace the front sway bar on my Delta about 2-3 years ago now. Bar was actually for a 70-81 Camaro and I picked up a brace bar for a 75-77 Cutlass (i think, could be the 73-74 Cutlass but I'm 99% sure it was for a 75-77) All UMI stuff
Both were a direct swap as well as the stock ZQ8 S-10 bump stops I installed. None of these parts I replaced were broken or rotted out and the car was over 30 years old. The end links, well they snapped the second I applied a little force to them
Understood. For the sake of eliminating a perpetual diatribe regarding useful definitions of "wear", I'll concede what you describe (above - cylinder walls having to be bored) as abrasion wear. What I describe as wear (regarding the Redox potential of two dissimilar metals) as corrosive wear. Both, IMO, are forms of "wear". 

I had a rear sway bar snap on my 79 H/O, loud thump/bang underneath as I turned into a steep driveway. Car suspension twisted pretty good due to degree of the gutter I suppose. Don't remember exactly where on the bar the break was but I assume near the mounting point.
I didn't think sway bars (anti roll bars to UK residents
) were made from mild steel. They would be bent a little every time the car went round a corner above walking pace, and I don't think they would put up with that for long. Leaf springs and coil springs - which are torsion bars coiled up - settle over time, and they are made from sterner stuff than mild steel. Of course road springs are subjected to a constant one way load.
Having said that Shurkey in post #21 told us that commercial bus sway bars can be made to fail, but not in normal service (I'm guessing over huge mileage), So in the real world if your sway bars don't have wear from friction in their mounting bushes or corrosion damage and it isn't a race car seeing regular track time don't sweat over it.
Roger.
) were made from mild steel. They would be bent a little every time the car went round a corner above walking pace, and I don't think they would put up with that for long. Leaf springs and coil springs - which are torsion bars coiled up - settle over time, and they are made from sterner stuff than mild steel. Of course road springs are subjected to a constant one way load.Having said that Shurkey in post #21 told us that commercial bus sway bars can be made to fail, but not in normal service (I'm guessing over huge mileage), So in the real world if your sway bars don't have wear from friction in their mounting bushes or corrosion damage and it isn't a race car seeing regular track time don't sweat over it.
Roger.
Last edited by rustyroger; Mar 31, 2020 at 08:20 AM.
I didn't think sway bars (anti roll bars to UK residents
) were made from mild steel. They would be bent a little every time the car went round a corner above walking pace, and I don't think they would put up with that for long. Leaf springs and coil springs - which are torsion bars coiled up - settle over time, and they are made from sterner stuff than mild steel. Having said that Shurkey in post #21 told us that commercial bus sway bars can be made to fail, but not in normal service (I'm guessing over huge mileage), So in the real world if your sway bars don't have wear from friction in their mounting bushes or corrosion damage and it isn't a race car seeing regular track time don't sweat over it.
Roger.
) were made from mild steel. They would be bent a little every time the car went round a corner above walking pace, and I don't think they would put up with that for long. Leaf springs and coil springs - which are torsion bars coiled up - settle over time, and they are made from sterner stuff than mild steel. Having said that Shurkey in post #21 told us that commercial bus sway bars can be made to fail, but not in normal service (I'm guessing over huge mileage), So in the real world if your sway bars don't have wear from friction in their mounting bushes or corrosion damage and it isn't a race car seeing regular track time don't sweat over it.Roger.
Fatigue strength is the load at which a metal part will break after being subjected to repeated loading - think of bending a paper clip. This is typically specified as an S-N curve (stress vs number of cycles), since the number of cycles to failure depends on the load - the lower the load, the more cycles a part can withstand.
Thanks for correcting me Joe. Are road springs made from mild steel too?, I didn't know that.
I came across a British 1 ton van that had composite rear springs, a single leaf of what looked like glass fiber. The original Mini's had rubber cone suspension, then a system involving hydraulics (Hydrolastic was it's registered trademark) and air suspension is commonplace on big trucks and buses nowadays. So I guess any elastic medium that works will do.
Roger.
I came across a British 1 ton van that had composite rear springs, a single leaf of what looked like glass fiber. The original Mini's had rubber cone suspension, then a system involving hydraulics (Hydrolastic was it's registered trademark) and air suspension is commonplace on big trucks and buses nowadays. So I guess any elastic medium that works will do.
Roger.
Thanks for correcting me Joe. Are road springs made from mild steel too?, I didn't know that.
I came across a British 1 ton van that had composite rear springs, a single leaf of what looked like glass fiber. The original Mini's had rubber cone suspension, then a system involving hydraulics (Hydrolastic was it's registered trademark) and air suspension is commonplace on big trucks and buses nowadays. So I guess any elastic medium that works will do.
Roger.
I came across a British 1 ton van that had composite rear springs, a single leaf of what looked like glass fiber. The original Mini's had rubber cone suspension, then a system involving hydraulics (Hydrolastic was it's registered trademark) and air suspension is commonplace on big trucks and buses nowadays. So I guess any elastic medium that works will do.
Roger.
Composite springs are not unusual. Corvettes used composite transverse leaf springs on the C4 through C7 generation cars.
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