Home Forums Articles How To's FAQ Register
Go Back   Xoutpost.com > BMW SAV Forums > X5 (E53) Forum
Fluid Motor Union
User Name
Password
Member List Premier Membership Today's Posts New Posts

Xoutpost server transfer and maintenance is occurring....
Xoutpost is currently undergoing a planned server migration.... stay tuned for new developments.... sincerely, the management


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 01-31-2026, 12:53 AM
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2020
Location: Austin TX
Posts: 78
miloh is on a distinguished road
Front suspension questions

Hey all, my tie rod ball joints are cracked and so are my CV boots. I've been hesitant to do suspension work on my X since 2021ish when I sheared off the eccentric bolt alignment tab in the back and had a shop re-weld it. BUT now I'm wanting to get a bit deeper and conquer my fears.
I've watched a lot of videos where people, namely M539 on youtube, use ball joint (I think) and bushing extraction tools.

On RealOEM the front tension struts:
31126769717 (L)
31126769718 (R)
have listed:
2x 31126769715 (Tension Strut Bushing)
2x 31126756491 (Ball Joint)
as components that seem to be replaceable.

The FCP kit from Lemforder: E53CAKIT10PIECEL has both tension struts with bushings preinstalled, and the ball joints separate.

Same with the front wishbones:
31126760275 (L)
31126760276 (R)
have listed:
2x 31121124622 (Bushing)

Both are the tension strut and wishbones are sold in the kit as the complete assembly.

Can or should I purchase the two replaceable components for the tension strut? Are there reasons to do the whole assembly over the serviceable parts? One time a shop told me you can only do replacements of some of those serviceable parts about two times. I'm not sure if that's true or not and I can't recall the reasons they supplied to me, so I wonder that also.

My CV boots are covered under a shop warranty so I'm gonna have those serviced and then start a refresh sometime soon (probably with x5chemist unless I get excited and jump the gun).
Reply With Quote

Sponsored Links

  #2  
Old 01-31-2026, 09:10 AM
andrewwynn's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Racine, WI
Posts: 12,324
andrewwynn will become famous soon enough
Unless you already have the press with the right fittings it's not worth the effort to replace the bushings just replace the whole part. Be careful on assembly, they take a crap ton of torque 165 ft·lb 225 N·m! IIRC, and must be tightened when the wheel is loaded. (i lift the hub from under the steering knuckle to load the suspension; it's impossible to torque with the wheel on and on the ground).

Plastic parts in the way; i made access holes for the tension strut bolts when replacing on our E53s.

Enjoy the cost difference on the older model. I paid about 250-300 per axle for complete OEM kits from FCP on the E53s. It's double that on the e70.

I bought the Neiko torque multiplier and is my favorite tool for big suspension bolts. 165/3=55 ft·lb to tighten monster bolts.

With the relatively low torques involved you can just use a 3/4 to 1/2 adapter with existing sockets but i bought a few specific to e53 suspension initially but eventually i bought a complete 3/4 drive socket set.


–awr–

Using Tapatalk VIP on iPhone
__________________
2011 E70 • N55 (me)
2012 E70 • N63 (wife)
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 02-01-2026, 01:34 AM
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2020
Location: Austin TX
Posts: 78
miloh is on a distinguished road
Cool. Thanks for that info. Would I maybe want to do custom bushings and ball joints where I get a tool to install ball joints I think will last longer or are better quality than OE lemforders?
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 02-01-2026, 10:56 AM
Henn28's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: May 2021
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 1,073
Henn28 is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by miloh View Post
Cool. Thanks for that info. Would I maybe want to do custom bushings and ball joints where I get a tool to install ball joints I think will last longer or are better quality than OE lemforders?
Unless that type of engineering is your thing, that sounds like a lot of work and brain damage. Frankly, I’d love to be able to contemplate fabricating stuff like that, but the one brain cell doesn’t stretch that far.

I do think that the majority of the mileage you get out of your suspension bits, especially control arms, depends on the quality of the roads where you drive. My OEM bushings made it a couple years (about 15k), at most and I had resigned myself to changing cheaper OEM arms every so often. I suspect too that my small lift and the wheels/tires I’ve got on put more stress on the front suspension, as does the hunting season driving I do on unimproved roads.

A couple years ago I decided to try a set of Turner monoball uppers (they make lowers too) which seemed pretty bullet prof, but I pulled them off after a year as they were too stiff for around town driving where I live. They have been replaced with poly bushings that I really like, but started squeaking within 6 months on the grease they sent with them. I pulled them again and lubed them with plane old white lithium grease. So far so good. I had a local shop press out the OE bushings and press the metal cups for the poly ones in.

As Andrew says, it takes a huge a of pressure to get the bushings in/out. Until this poly set though, I’ve always bought complete sets since I don’t have a press, and when time is considered buying replacement OEM arms made sense to me. I know Turner makes monoball uppers and lowers and you can buy the bushings or complete arms. More expensive, but they feel amazing on good roads. My switching to the monoball and now poly bushings was really just out of curiosity if they would last longer on my modified X5.

Long story short, I had gotten pretty fast at replacing control arms and aligning with string in the driveway (thanks to an education by Factory6speed), so I leaned towards buying OEM arms every couple years. The right tools are a must and will make life a lot easier and the job much faster. I resisted buying single use tools for years and wasted so much time and energy on axles, ball joints, etc.

Now I’ve got two ball joint separators (large and smaller) for the arms, a big three leg press to push the axle out, the special puller to pull it back into the hub, and a 40” breaker bar to get the axle nut set. It’s mostly Amazon junk, but saves me so much time. I think the ball joint separators are from ECS:
https://www.ecstuning.com/b-schwaben.../008959sch01a/

That torque multiplier sounds like a great tool Andrew. Definitely better than guessing for the really high torque fasteners.
__________________
Current
Original owner 2002 E53 X5 4.4i to 4.6i swap
2026 G80 M3 6 spd
2025 G06 X5 50e
Former
1972 Audi Fox
1986 Saab 900S
1996 BMW Z3
1998 BMW E36 M3 Sedan
2004 BMW E46 M3
2006 Audi A3 Quatro
1993 Mopar 318 Jeep Grand Cherokee
2015 V6 Jeep Grand Cherokee

Last edited by Henn28; 02-01-2026 at 11:37 AM.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 02-01-2026, 05:14 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2021
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 2,137
X5chemist will become famous soon enough
I did bushings on mine. A local shop charged me $20 each to press them in. There's an arrow on the bushing too. I must be clocked correctly to the arm. I replaced all four in one morning. Not hard to do with ramps and proper tools.
__________________
'06 X5 3.0i - bought @143,123 miles (12/26/20)
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 02-02-2026, 10:06 AM
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2020
Location: Austin TX
Posts: 78
miloh is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by Henn28 View Post
Unless that type of engineering is your thing, that sounds like a lot of work and brain damage. Frankly, I’d love to be able to contemplate fabricating stuff like that, but the one brain cell doesn’t stretch that far.

I do think that the majority of the mileage you get out of your suspension bits, especially control arms, depends on the quality of the roads where you drive.
Ok that makes sense. I wouldn’t have made the ball joints from scratch, just if there was an obvious “ball joints you would have to press yourself but is superior build quality”
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 02-02-2026, 10:30 AM
Henn28's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: May 2021
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 1,073
Henn28 is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by miloh View Post
Ok that makes sense. I wouldn’t have made the ball joints from scratch, just if there was an obvious “ball joints you would have to press yourself but is superior build quality”
I’m not absolutely sure, but I think these are the only game in town:
https://www.turnermotorsport.com/p-3...-arm-bearings/

Turner also sells monoballs for the lowers as well. Like the uppers they come as complete arms or just the bushings.

If your roads are smooth where you live these may be the way to go, despite the cost. They should last a long time. As I mentioned, the ride was very, very good. They tightened the x5 up quite a bit from the OEM upper bushings I was cycling thru every 18 mos or so. Too tight for the crappy streets we have in New Orleans at the end of the day however, so they are in my parts locker as spares. I might toss them back on if these poly bushings start squeaking again though. The pothole fairy landed and fixed a few of the bigger ones around my neighborhood recently.

The polys feel really nice, but I’m no better off if I need to drop them too often for new grease.
__________________
Current
Original owner 2002 E53 X5 4.4i to 4.6i swap
2026 G80 M3 6 spd
2025 G06 X5 50e
Former
1972 Audi Fox
1986 Saab 900S
1996 BMW Z3
1998 BMW E36 M3 Sedan
2004 BMW E46 M3
2006 Audi A3 Quatro
1993 Mopar 318 Jeep Grand Cherokee
2015 V6 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 02-02-2026, 11:07 AM
andrewwynn's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Racine, WI
Posts: 12,324
andrewwynn will become famous soon enough
[mention]Henn28 [/mention] have you ever tried running lower psi to help the pothole situation? There is A LOT of margin on the psi numbers even before you'll get significant edge wear.

I use a Segway MiniPro for mobility and ouch on the poor knees if i inflate to spec (45) i inflate to 25 and soaks up most of the sidewalk bumps.

I haven't aired up e53 since 2021 but i think it's something like 32/39 front/rear maybe 32/32 if empty trunk.

Drop five and unless you drive crazy numbers your tires won't wear that fast. Air up full for trips of course.

I kind of don't use brakes for corners that's what m/s is for so I add 2-3 on the fronts to try to get more wear in the center.


–awr–

Using Tapatalk VIP on iPhone
__________________
2011 E70 • N55 (me)
2012 E70 • N63 (wife)
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 02-04-2026, 01:01 AM
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2016
Location: Menlo Park, CA
Posts: 2,526
Fifty150hs is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewwynn View Post
Unless you already have the press with the right fittings it's not worth the effort to replace the bushings just replace the whole part. Be careful on assembly, they take a crap ton of torque 165 ft·lb 225 N·m! IIRC, and must be tightened when the wheel is loaded. (i lift the hub from under the steering knuckle to load the suspension; it's impossible to torque with the wheel on and on the ground).

Plastic parts in the way; i made access holes for the tension strut bolts when replacing on our E53s.

Enjoy the cost difference on the older model. I paid about 250-300 per axle for complete OEM kits from FCP on the E53s. It's double that on the e70.

I bought the Neiko torque multiplier and is my favorite tool for big suspension bolts. 165/3=55 ft·lb to tighten monster bolts.

With the relatively low torques involved you can just use a 3/4 to 1/2 adapter with existing sockets but i bought a few specific to e53 suspension initially but eventually i bought a complete 3/4 drive socket set.


–awr–

Using Tapatalk VIP on iPhone
I jack the axles up to correct ride height with the car on jack stands when I torque the tension strut bolts. Much easier to get to and the suspension doesn't "know" its not on the ground.
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 02-04-2026, 01:08 AM
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2016
Location: Menlo Park, CA
Posts: 2,526
Fifty150hs is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by Henn28 View Post
I’m not absolutely sure, but I think these are the only game in town:
https://www.turnermotorsport.com/p-3...-arm-bearings/

Turner also sells monoballs for the lowers as well. Like the uppers they come as complete arms or just the bushings.

If your roads are smooth where you live these may be the way to go, despite the cost. They should last a long time. As I mentioned, the ride was very, very good. They tightened the x5 up quite a bit from the OEM upper bushings I was cycling thru every 18 mos or so. Too tight for the crappy streets we have in New Orleans at the end of the day however, so they are in my parts locker as spares. I might toss them back on if these poly bushings start squeaking again though. The pothole fairy landed and fixed a few of the bigger ones around my neighborhood recently.

The polys feel really nice, but I’m no better off if I need to drop them too often for new grease.
Changed mine to poly bushings. I think they're the best way to go. They have lifetime warranty and I haven't ever had to refresh the grease.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On





All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:09 AM.
vBulletin, Copyright 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. SEO by vBSEO 3.6.0
© 2017 Xoutpost.com. All rights reserved. Xoutpost.com is a private enthusiast site not associated with BMW AG.
The BMW name, marks, M stripe logo, and Roundel logo as well as X3, X5 and X6 designations used in the pages of this Web Site are the property of BMW AG.
This web site is not sponsored or affiliated in any way with BMW AG or any of its subsidiaries.