After I returned from the salvage yard, I set up another detail for tomorrow, and plugged my phone up since it was about to die. The. Halo'd it up online while it was charging
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After it finished I went to the store and picked up some brake cleaner and a can of grizzly, put the hatch on jack stands and got busy. I removed my drum covers and cleaned the front and rear brakes, broke out my new oem hardware and started to replace the crap the previous owner threw in. I beleive my car was stolen once and stripped cause everything on it doesn't match up, the y7, some panels, and the entire suspension (before hand).
New oem freshness compared to rigged crap.
After finishing that up, I went around and tourqed all of my suspension bolts to spec, while looking for any problems that could be causing the poping during almost full lock turning. I removed the steering column cover and inspected the universals and bolts and they were fine, so I double checked everything, that's when I found my problem. The passengers side upper ball joint. The castle nut didnt have a pin in it, and it had backed off a 1/4"
I'm glad I double checked l, neglected that would have been very bad. Well I tried to Tourqe it back but the whole assembly was turning, so I googled the problem and found on a forum that you need to compress the upper control arm by putting a jack under the knuckle and a block of wood above the control arm, compress it a few inches to back the nut off. After I finally got it off, I cleaned the threads and saw blockade in the cotter pin sleeve. The person before broke the pin off inside it. I used a 1/16 drill pit to clear the debri from the sleeve and tourqed it back down and used a slightly beefier pin than stock.
Finally I rotated my tires before putting everything together, put the car on the ground, re tourqed my lugs and test drove it.
No more poping, and slightly firmer and more responsive steering. I guess the poping was the a arm traveling when the suspension was compressing and turning.
Finally I cleaned up everything and broke the seized nuts loose on the ex lca's I bought this morning to get them apart for cleaning and bushing removal.
I had a lot of fun today, and now a peice of mind I won't die on my way to work. Small, but indeed progress. Thanks for tuning in!