Here’s a cheap fix for the air suspension compressor silencer. Mine didn’t survive when removing the fender liners to replace the upper control arm bushings on my 2000 Grand Marquis LS. (More on that later.)
My local Ford dealer said the silencers were no longer available, though I would think the ones from later years are the same. In any event, I wanted something sturdier than what came out.
I had already replaced the gaskets and bolts/nuts where the catalytic converters attach to the H-pipe. (Ford uses regular bolts/nuts on a stainless steel exhaust? WTF?!?) I had used 3/8" stainless steel bolts/nuts/washers that my father had left over from his machine shop days, and I still had some left over. The holes for the air compressor in the fender liner are actually 3/8", so I was halfway there.
I checked the websites of my local hardware stores for anything made of rubber, and one of the things that came up was rubber parts to protect floors from furniture. I found some 7/8" screw-on rubber bumpers whose narrow end just barely fits in the holes on the compressor mount where the black silencer bushings go. I just had to enlarge the holes to 3/8". I also found some 1 3/4" round rubber cups (for protecting your floor from furniture legs) that had a ridge that was just the right size for pushing down on the mount. I just had to drill 3/8" holes and cut away the excess using a series of 1/16" drill holes and a knife. For the top washers, I cut the threads off of plastic caps from juice containers. The reinforcement on the outer edge of the resulting plastic washer is useful for focussing the downward pressure in that area.
A photo of these parts is attached.
This was my setup, starting from the bottom:
• 3/8" stainless steel bolt, pointing up
• ‘flat’ spring washer with wide end against fender liner (I had run out of regular flat washers)
• fender liner
• white rubber bumper, narrow end up
• air compressor mount sitting on narrow end of white rubber bumper
• piece cut from round rubber cup to push down on mount
• plastic washer made from juice cap
• flat metal washer
• regular nut
The compressor is so noisy that you can’t do much to ‘silence’ it, but this setup provides some degree of improvement over the original silencer.
I just relied on the force of the rubber to keep the nuts in place, so if the nuts loosen off, I guess I’ll add some thread lock or use the nuts with the nylon inserts.
It ain’t pretty, but it’s cheap and it works!
My local Ford dealer said the silencers were no longer available, though I would think the ones from later years are the same. In any event, I wanted something sturdier than what came out.
I had already replaced the gaskets and bolts/nuts where the catalytic converters attach to the H-pipe. (Ford uses regular bolts/nuts on a stainless steel exhaust? WTF?!?) I had used 3/8" stainless steel bolts/nuts/washers that my father had left over from his machine shop days, and I still had some left over. The holes for the air compressor in the fender liner are actually 3/8", so I was halfway there.
I checked the websites of my local hardware stores for anything made of rubber, and one of the things that came up was rubber parts to protect floors from furniture. I found some 7/8" screw-on rubber bumpers whose narrow end just barely fits in the holes on the compressor mount where the black silencer bushings go. I just had to enlarge the holes to 3/8". I also found some 1 3/4" round rubber cups (for protecting your floor from furniture legs) that had a ridge that was just the right size for pushing down on the mount. I just had to drill 3/8" holes and cut away the excess using a series of 1/16" drill holes and a knife. For the top washers, I cut the threads off of plastic caps from juice containers. The reinforcement on the outer edge of the resulting plastic washer is useful for focussing the downward pressure in that area.
A photo of these parts is attached.
This was my setup, starting from the bottom:
• 3/8" stainless steel bolt, pointing up
• ‘flat’ spring washer with wide end against fender liner (I had run out of regular flat washers)
• fender liner
• white rubber bumper, narrow end up
• air compressor mount sitting on narrow end of white rubber bumper
• piece cut from round rubber cup to push down on mount
• plastic washer made from juice cap
• flat metal washer
• regular nut
The compressor is so noisy that you can’t do much to ‘silence’ it, but this setup provides some degree of improvement over the original silencer.
I just relied on the force of the rubber to keep the nuts in place, so if the nuts loosen off, I guess I’ll add some thread lock or use the nuts with the nylon inserts.
It ain’t pretty, but it’s cheap and it works!
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