Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate
links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.
Amen to that brother! Seriously something like that happening makes you reflect and be thankful! We all need reminders, i know i do...Junk it was. Never doing that again. Good to be alive!
Thats what you call, peace of mind! priceless!
Yesterday, as I left home, I heard click sound. I pulled over in the parking lot to check the suspension. It was dark and could properly see what happened. As I started to back out, my LCA separated from steering knuckle. I had truck towed to home. Later inspection revealed that it was a ball joint failure. I am lucky that it happened at low speed and parking lot. I am not going to speculate how it failed and how long it was like this. It had an initial crack and then final failure. So don’t ignore suspension sounds. I typically inspect all fasteners visually if anything is loose. But in this case, it was not discovered during visual inspection. I am replacing both LCA with OEM tundra.
View attachment 2189554View attachment 2189555View attachment 2189556View attachment 2189557
It was an aftermarket tundra arm.
When I saw the title of this thread, "LCA Ball Joint Failure," it immediately caught my attention. I read through the first page and became more and more concerned. How could Toyota produce a part that could fail in this manner? Then I saw:
Well... geez. Perhaps a better thread title should have been, "Aftermarket Tundra LCA Ball Joint Failure."
Just sayin'
![]()
![]()