Hi all -
I purchased two OEM couplers to fit an Ireland Engineering urethane coupler in case I destroyed one of them - turns out it was an easy process and now I have an extra coupler that I can cut and ship for someone that wants to do the same. If you watch videos online, you see people drilling out the bolts but I have a nice press with a perfectly fit tip that pushes these out very cleanly.
I keep all of my OEM components (headers, exhaust piping, steering rack, suspension parts) when I swap them out for aftermarket as the car only has 47K miles, so that’s why I bought two because I wasn’t going to use my OEM coupler.
What you get with this purchase:
1. Cut out the old OEM rubber coupler
2. Clean and “resharpen” the inner knurls (I have a throwaway pinion shaft that I use for realigning anything that’s off)
3. Clean the brackets in an ultrasonic cleaner
4. Sand (where needed), polish and treat with a rust preventative
$50 shipped
Pictures attached to show the coupler for sale (bottom) and what a finished version looks like with the Ireland Engineering coupler (top).
David
I purchased two OEM couplers to fit an Ireland Engineering urethane coupler in case I destroyed one of them - turns out it was an easy process and now I have an extra coupler that I can cut and ship for someone that wants to do the same. If you watch videos online, you see people drilling out the bolts but I have a nice press with a perfectly fit tip that pushes these out very cleanly.
I keep all of my OEM components (headers, exhaust piping, steering rack, suspension parts) when I swap them out for aftermarket as the car only has 47K miles, so that’s why I bought two because I wasn’t going to use my OEM coupler.
What you get with this purchase:
1. Cut out the old OEM rubber coupler
2. Clean and “resharpen” the inner knurls (I have a throwaway pinion shaft that I use for realigning anything that’s off)
3. Clean the brackets in an ultrasonic cleaner
4. Sand (where needed), polish and treat with a rust preventative
$50 shipped
Pictures attached to show the coupler for sale (bottom) and what a finished version looks like with the Ireland Engineering coupler (top).
David
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