Morning all,
My car has been in for new front springs as the offside front had broken. The broken spring has been replaced, but apparently it was a cow of a job as the connection to the damper had corroded badly, although not in an area that would impact the performance of the damper apparently.
The mechanic is concerned that in replacing the unbroken nearside spring, the damper may be damaged, & I'd need two new dampers.
I'm concerned that from a history POV, replacing only the broken spring might look like cutting corners, but I'm being assured that the springs don't degrade, so there'd be no benefit to making the change, only the risk of damaging the dampers.
So, would you leave the unbroken spring alone (despite having paid for the part & labour), or replace it & hope that the damper isn't damaged in the process?
My car has been in for new front springs as the offside front had broken. The broken spring has been replaced, but apparently it was a cow of a job as the connection to the damper had corroded badly, although not in an area that would impact the performance of the damper apparently.
The mechanic is concerned that in replacing the unbroken nearside spring, the damper may be damaged, & I'd need two new dampers.
I'm concerned that from a history POV, replacing only the broken spring might look like cutting corners, but I'm being assured that the springs don't degrade, so there'd be no benefit to making the change, only the risk of damaging the dampers.
So, would you leave the unbroken spring alone (despite having paid for the part & labour), or replace it & hope that the damper isn't damaged in the process?