This is the part of youtube I love. An instructional video with no crazy intro and no fluff. I learned how to do something, and now I'm going to apply it. Thanks for this.
Three different shops quoted me around $1,800 to replace JUST the strut assemblies. I replaced all four strut assemblies AND all four sway bar links on my 2014 CRV yesterday using this video as a guide for only $600 in parts. I just bookmarked your other CRV videos for when the time comes to do that maintenance too. THANK YOU!!
Hi may I ask what strut brand do u bought, dealer quote me oem 1500$ just parts... I want to do myself with aftermarket but I don't know which one is good ... my is crv 2016 thank you
This was a huge help on my in-laws’ 2013 CR-V. Watched it 5 or 6 times before doing this and during the job. Started in the left rear and that took me 2 hours, but that was the learning curve. Getting that rear bottom out of the cup was a chore! I ended up removing the rear sway bar linkage to give me enough play to get them out. The other 3 took another 2 hours total. Much faster. I forgot to put the wipers up but I had no issues with them in the parked position. All in all a great tutorial. Thanks!! 🤙🏼
Hey man, I also replaced front and rear struts and sway bar links on our '012 CRV with the help of your video, I am not a mechanic at all, it took me couple of days to do the 4 struts because removing the sway bay links was really hard, but at the end all went well. My last 2023 car job, lol. Thank you so much and have great new year.
It’s been four years since I’ve taken my back shocks off, so that was great. I bought the O’Reilly shocks top-of-the-line with a lifetime warranty and four years later they sound spongy. It’s the full shock and spring assembly and I’m gonna go down tomorrow and they’re gonna give me free ones to replace. Hopefully I don’t have issues with the fronts but we’ll see what happens when I get the back ones on.
Truly, one of the best instructional videos I've watched. No nonsense, laid back, informative, and naturally descriptive in each step of the process. Thank you very much for this. I'll hopefully be getting this done next week. I've got to change my front struts and will be changing my rear struts in a couple of weeks. My budget won't allow me to knock it all out at once, but this has left me extremely confident in my first attempt at getting this done. Cheers.
I just replaced my shocks and struts for our 2015 CRV. Thank you very much for this video. It made things easier for me and saved me a lot of time. My only suggestion is adding a tool list and torque specs in the video description section. Other than that , great video!! Thank you !!
Just finished tackling this. Thanks for the video! I also used a small jack stand in addition to the jack under the ball joint to stabilize it which helped. What a difference having new struts and sway bar links after 220K miles on my CRV! :)
I am not a mechanic by any stretch of the imagination; however, if I followed this video, I could change my struts on the back and front. If I had a car that I could just toy around with, I would be willing to try this because this is great instruction. I am watching this because I do have to get my struts replaced on my Honda CR-V and I want to know if ANYTHING goes wrong, I know the process and can speak a little more intelligently on the matter. Thank you so much. Happy Holidays!
Thank you very much I appreciate that. That is actually a smart move getting a little knowledge on what the shop will be performing because not every shop is honest on this kind of stuff. Thanks again and same to you happy holidays.
Thanks for the video, good to see how the rear strut assembly is made. Quick notes: when torquing with a torque wrench, the bolt must turn some before the wrench clicks, otherwise it was already too tight. Also, using an impact to drive the bolt through the bottom of the strut could damage the bolt threads.
Written steps of the job: ## Front Struts 1. Turn on the vehicle, turn on the wipers, and turn off the vehicle with wipers up to access the front struts. 2. Remove plastic covers by wiper joint using pry tool 3. Jack the vehicle up, and place the jack stand on the pinch weld. 4. Remove Tire 19 MM socket 5. Remove the brake line from the front strut. 12 MM socket 6. Remove the ABS wheel speed sensor from the strut Use plastic pry and clip remover. 7. Remove the lower sway bar link, only because we are replacing the links. 17 MM socket/wrench 6 MM Allen key 8. Remove struts and knuckle bolts. 19 MM socket 22 MM socket Can use impact to get off. 1. Place Jack standing underneath the knuckle to lift the suspension a little. 2. Remove the sway bar link bolt from the sway bar. 3. Remove bolts from knuckle to strut. 9. At the top of the strut tower, remove all five nuts 13 MM socket or 15 MM socket 10. Remove the strut 1. Lower the jack to allow the suspension to rest and slowly work the strut out NOTE: Do not lower the jack too much, don't put too much stress on the CV axle. 11. Lift the new strut up into the well, once seated try and get some of the threads started to hold the strut in place. 13 MM socket or 15 MM socket 12. Tighten down the five lugs hand tight for now 13. Position the steering knuckle into the new strut 19 MM socket 22 MM socket Torque: 115 ft-lbs 1. Use the jack to help lift and align to get the bolts back through. 14. Reattach break line 12 MM socket 15. Reattach the ABS speed sensor cable. Reseat plastic clip and rubber boot 16. Install a new sway bar 1. Seat lower bolt first 2. Lightly get the bottom nut started 3. Once positioned tighten down the bottom nut 1. 18 MM socket 2. 18 MM wrench 3. Torque: 58 ft-lbs 17. Jack up the strut until you can get the top link bolt into the strut assembly. 18. Once positioned tighten down the top nut 1. 18 MM socket 2. 18 MM wrench 3. Torque: 58 ft-lbs 19. Using a grease gun put 3 to 4 shots of grease into each link joint. 1. Wipe off excess grease 20. With the strut still jacked up, tighten the five top strut bolts. 1. 15 MM socket 2. Torque: 30 ft-lbs 21. Remount the wheel and lower the vehicle 1. Lower the jack 2. Remount the wheel 1. 19 MM socket 3. Jack the car back up 4. Remove the jack stand 5. Lower the jack 6. Torque lugs to 80 ft-lbs 22. Double-check strut tightness with a vehicle on the ground 23. Remount plastic trim pieces 24. Remount rubber molding ## Rear Struts 1. Lift up back seat 2. Folder rear seats forward 3. Remove plastic strut cover 1. Pry up the front of the panel on the side toward the front of the vehicle. 4. Jack up the vehicle at the center cross member. Jack is kind of high. 5. Place jack stands on both sides of the vehicle on jack mount points. 6. Remove the wheel from the vehicle. 7. Remove bolts holding the forward control arm 1. 17 MM socket 2. Use an impact gun 8. Remove the strut bolt going through the bottom of the suspension 1. 17 MM socket 2. Use an impact gun 9. Remove struct top mount nuts inside the vehicle 1. 14 MM socket 2. Use rachet 10. Remove strut assembly 1. Wiggle assembly and potentially use a pry bar to help get the strut free. 2. Swing it down and in toward the vehicle. 11. Feed new strut assembly up into the well 12. Hand tighten snug struct mount nuts 1. 14 MM socket 13. Replace the bolt going through the bottom of the suspension 1. 17 MM socket 2. Might need to use a mallet to align holes 3. Use a pry to help lift the strut to align the bolt 4. Once started by hand you can use an impact to drive home. 14. Replace bolts for forward control arm 1. Use the jack to lift the suspension to align the holes 2. Thread bolts by hand 3. Can use socket or impact 15. Lower the jack to allow the suspension to hang 16. Torque forward control arm bolts 1. 17 MM 2. Torque: 54 ft-lbs 17. Torque lower strut bolt 1. 17 MM 2. Torque: 64 ft-lbs 18. Remount wheels 19. Do the other side of the vehicle next. Do 1-18 again for the other side. 20. Jack the car back up at the center cross member remove the jack stands and lower the vehicle. 21. Tighten wheel lugs 1. 19 MM socket 2. Torque: 80 ft-lbs 22. Torque rear strut mount nuts 1. 14 MM socket 2. Torque: 33 ft-lbs 23. Replace plastic covers
You will probably be okay not having it aligned. I would just keep an eye on the rear tires afterwards and if you notice any unusual wear just take it in to have it aligned.
Depends if you live in the snow belt or not. Up north the rust is gonna make it hard. Clean the threads first with a wire brush. Down south its not hard.
12 CRV with 160K miles. The ride really sucks and cornering is bad. This is gonna be the last Honda I ever get. The OEM struts are really weak. Not leaking - just not enough dampening. Not sure what I'm gonna replace them with yet. Usually get KYB but heard some bad stuff lately. How is the Monroe? They used to suck back 30 years ago but maybe got their act together now. How are yours holding up?
@@BigZeus My daughter's CX-5 has the same mileage on the struts and it still handles like a dream - Japanese parts. Honda America sources parts from US companies. I wouldn't be surprised if they OEM Monroe or Gabriel garbage.
@@gfriedman99 There is a strut made in Japan for crv, you can just buy that if you want to. Like other said, your 2012 may be due for replacement with that kind of milage and age!
It’s crazy that shops wanna be charging you 300 plus for just the rear shocks 250-300 for just labor when it took me 30-1 hr to do. Insane. Should be theft
This is the part of youtube I love. An instructional video with no crazy intro and no fluff. I learned how to do something, and now I'm going to apply it. Thanks for this.
Agree 100%! Great explanation and camera angles too so we can see all the work.
Good, now send him some money for his time and knowledge that he shared with you to support his channel.
Just used this video to change struts on 2012 CR-V and couldn’t be happier. Fantastic instructional video. Thanks!
Three different shops quoted me around $1,800 to replace JUST the strut assemblies. I replaced all four strut assemblies AND all four sway bar links on my 2014 CRV yesterday using this video as a guide for only $600 in parts.
I just bookmarked your other CRV videos for when the time comes to do that maintenance too. THANK YOU!!
Glad I was able to help
What brand parte? Monroe is life time replacement. Alot of cheap Amazon with no or 1yr warranty
Hi may I ask what strut brand do u bought, dealer quote me oem 1500$ just parts... I want to do myself with aftermarket but I don't know which one is good ... my is crv 2016 thank you
This was a huge help on my in-laws’ 2013 CR-V. Watched it 5 or 6 times before doing this and during the job. Started in the left rear and that took me 2 hours, but that was the learning curve. Getting that rear bottom out of the cup was a chore! I ended up removing the rear sway bar linkage to give me enough play to get them out. The other 3 took another 2 hours total. Much faster. I forgot to put the wipers up but I had no issues with them in the parked position.
All in all a great tutorial. Thanks!! 🤙🏼
Send him some money for his time and knowledge
I'm getting ready to do this job for my wife's CRV. This is a great video. I might even get all the plastic parts off without breaking any this time 😀
Love how long and informative this is, made me think I can do this with ease. Thanks
Hey man, I also replaced front and rear struts and sway bar links on our '012 CRV with the help of your video, I am not a mechanic at all, it took me couple of days to do the 4 struts because removing the sway bay links was really hard, but at the end all went well. My last 2023 car job, lol. Thank you so much and have great new year.
Wow it looks easy but you need to have faith and tools 😂😂nice and great tutorial👍👍
It’s been four years since I’ve taken my back shocks off, so that was great. I bought the O’Reilly shocks top-of-the-line with a lifetime warranty and four years later they sound spongy. It’s the full shock and spring assembly and I’m gonna go down tomorrow and they’re gonna give me free ones to replace.
Hopefully I don’t have issues with the fronts but we’ll see what happens when I get the back ones on.
Thanks for the very clear images and instructions, including torque values which some people don't seem to use. Hope mine goes as smoothly.
Truly, one of the best instructional videos I've watched. No nonsense, laid back, informative, and naturally descriptive in each step of the process. Thank you very much for this. I'll hopefully be getting this done next week. I've got to change my front struts and will be changing my rear struts in a couple of weeks. My budget won't allow me to knock it all out at once, but this has left me extremely confident in my first attempt at getting this done. Cheers.
I just replaced my shocks and struts for our 2015 CRV. Thank you very much for this video. It made things easier for me and saved me a lot of time. My only suggestion is adding a tool list and torque specs in the video description section. Other than that , great video!! Thank you !!
How much did it cost?
How much time did it take you to replace it?
Fantastic quality and instructions. I love how you actually take and effort to position the camera correctly in those tight spaces. A+ top job.
An Excellent step by step video, giving the do it myselfer the confidence to get er done fast and easy! Thanks for the best quality video too!
Just finished tackling this. Thanks for the video! I also used a small jack stand in addition to the jack under the ball joint to stabilize it which helped. What a difference having new struts and sway bar links after 220K miles on my CRV! :)
Link for parts or where you got em? And cost for labor or did you DIY it?
I am not a mechanic by any stretch of the imagination; however, if I followed this video, I could change my struts on the back and front. If I had a car that I could just toy around with, I would be willing to try this because this is great instruction. I am watching this because I do have to get my struts replaced on my Honda CR-V and I want to know if ANYTHING goes wrong, I know the process and can speak a little more intelligently on the matter. Thank you so much. Happy Holidays!
Thank you very much I appreciate that. That is actually a smart move getting a little knowledge on what the shop will be performing because not every shop is honest on this kind of stuff. Thanks again and same to you happy holidays.
@@BLUECOLLARGARAGE You wouldn't happen to be in Maryland, would you?
@@jamesmayo8881 no sorry I’m all the way out in Colorado.
Thanks for the video, good to see how the rear strut assembly is made. Quick notes: when torquing with a torque wrench, the bolt must turn some before the wrench clicks, otherwise it was already too tight. Also, using an impact to drive the bolt through the bottom of the strut could damage the bolt threads.
Thank You for the video. It was very helpful. It was a pain to get to the bolts for the rear struts, but this video saved me.
Mine is not leaking but im feeling every small bumbs on road .. should i change my structs?
Its 10 years old now.
Thank you for this video saved me $700.00
Fantastic instruction.. Thank you so much for taking the time and help us save lots of money and learn so much. Thanks again couldn't be any happier.
Thanks for taking the time do share this instruction. Much appreciated!
Very detailed instructions thank you very much. GOD BLESS YOU!
Glad it was helpful!
- Those torque specs were helpful , thanks.
Written steps of the job:
## Front Struts
1. Turn on the vehicle, turn on the wipers, and turn off the vehicle with wipers up to access the front struts.
2. Remove plastic covers by wiper joint using pry tool
3. Jack the vehicle up, and place the jack stand on the pinch weld.
4. Remove Tire
19 MM socket
5. Remove the brake line from the front strut.
12 MM socket
6. Remove the ABS wheel speed sensor from the strut
Use plastic pry and clip remover.
7. Remove the lower sway bar link, only because we are replacing the links.
17 MM socket/wrench
6 MM Allen key
8. Remove struts and knuckle bolts.
19 MM socket
22 MM socket
Can use impact to get off.
1. Place Jack standing underneath the knuckle to lift the suspension a little.
2. Remove the sway bar link bolt from the sway bar.
3. Remove bolts from knuckle to strut.
9. At the top of the strut tower, remove all five nuts
13 MM socket or 15 MM socket
10. Remove the strut
1. Lower the jack to allow the suspension to rest and slowly work the strut out
NOTE: Do not lower the jack too much, don't put too much stress on the CV axle.
11. Lift the new strut up into the well, once seated try and get some of the threads started to hold the strut in place.
13 MM socket or 15 MM socket
12. Tighten down the five lugs hand tight for now
13. Position the steering knuckle into the new strut
19 MM socket
22 MM socket
Torque: 115 ft-lbs
1. Use the jack to help lift and align to get the bolts back through.
14. Reattach break line
12 MM socket
15. Reattach the ABS speed sensor cable. Reseat plastic clip and rubber boot
16. Install a new sway bar
1. Seat lower bolt first
2. Lightly get the bottom nut started
3. Once positioned tighten down the bottom nut
1. 18 MM socket
2. 18 MM wrench
3. Torque: 58 ft-lbs
17. Jack up the strut until you can get the top link bolt into the strut assembly.
18. Once positioned tighten down the top nut
1. 18 MM socket
2. 18 MM wrench
3. Torque: 58 ft-lbs
19. Using a grease gun put 3 to 4 shots of grease into each link joint.
1. Wipe off excess grease
20. With the strut still jacked up, tighten the five top strut bolts.
1. 15 MM socket
2. Torque: 30 ft-lbs
21. Remount the wheel and lower the vehicle
1. Lower the jack
2. Remount the wheel
1. 19 MM socket
3. Jack the car back up
4. Remove the jack stand
5. Lower the jack
6. Torque lugs to 80 ft-lbs
22. Double-check strut tightness with a vehicle on the ground
23. Remount plastic trim pieces
24. Remount rubber molding
## Rear Struts
1. Lift up back seat
2. Folder rear seats forward
3. Remove plastic strut cover
1. Pry up the front of the panel on the side toward the front of the vehicle.
4. Jack up the vehicle at the center cross member. Jack is kind of high.
5. Place jack stands on both sides of the vehicle on jack mount points.
6. Remove the wheel from the vehicle.
7. Remove bolts holding the forward control arm
1. 17 MM socket
2. Use an impact gun
8. Remove the strut bolt going through the bottom of the suspension
1. 17 MM socket
2. Use an impact gun
9. Remove struct top mount nuts inside the vehicle
1. 14 MM socket
2. Use rachet
10. Remove strut assembly
1. Wiggle assembly and potentially use a pry bar to help get the strut free.
2. Swing it down and in toward the vehicle.
11. Feed new strut assembly up into the well
12. Hand tighten snug struct mount nuts
1. 14 MM socket
13. Replace the bolt going through the bottom of the suspension
1. 17 MM socket
2. Might need to use a mallet to align holes
3. Use a pry to help lift the strut to align the bolt
4. Once started by hand you can use an impact to drive home.
14. Replace bolts for forward control arm
1. Use the jack to lift the suspension to align the holes
2. Thread bolts by hand
3. Can use socket or impact
15. Lower the jack to allow the suspension to hang
16. Torque forward control arm bolts
1. 17 MM
2. Torque: 54 ft-lbs
17. Torque lower strut bolt
1. 17 MM
2. Torque: 64 ft-lbs
18. Remount wheels
19. Do the other side of the vehicle next. Do 1-18 again for the other side.
20. Jack the car back up at the center cross member remove the jack stands and lower the vehicle.
21. Tighten wheel lugs
1. 19 MM socket
2. Torque: 80 ft-lbs
22. Torque rear strut mount nuts
1. 14 MM socket
2. Torque: 33 ft-lbs
23. Replace plastic covers
Excellent video. Got the rear ones done this weekend. Why did you replace front sway bar links?
Great job. On front, does it need 2b aligned?
Nice work man thank you for sharing!
My OCD is kicking in when he doesn't even attempt to clean those cone stuck in it 12:13!
Great video! Do you need to torque the five nuts on top of the front struts?
I believe the torque is 30 ft lbs but just getting them nice and snug you’ll be alright.
Exelente explicacion . Muchas gracias
Great video brother, I will try to follow your instructions step by step.
Jesus Christ you have one squirrel nest right there .😀
Great tutorial. 👍
Great video. I got a 2014 crv. Everything looks pretty rusty on mine, but still seems to work fine. Why did you change these?
Thanks. A couple of them were leaking and was having tire wear issues.
great! can you list what tools you used to dis/assemble struts?
Excellent video... Thanks a lot !!!
Good job, very detailed.
Thank you.
Is there any reason to replace the rear strut mount along with the strut? I am having a hard time even finding them for sale
No need to replace the rear mount just reuse the original one because it doesn’t turn or anything like the front ones do.
Thank you for the content, it was really helpful!
I am getting ready to do the same service on my CRV. I was considering getting quick struts like the ones you used. How have they worked out for you?
Excellent detail and descriptions. Well done!
Thanks for sharing!
Does anyone knows what the best aftermarket struts for crv??? Honda dealer oem is expensive $1500 for fronts...
The kyb excel g are really good along with the bilsteins.
Thank you so much sire 🎉
I just noticed a rear strut leaking fluid. If I replace just the rears, do I need to have an alignment done?
You will probably be okay not having it aligned. I would just keep an eye on the rear tires afterwards and if you notice any unusual wear just take it in to have it aligned.
@@BLUECOLLARGARAGE ok. I understand if I did the fronts I would definitely need to, I just wasn’t sure if I only messed with the rears.
can I ask you how many miles did your struts have on them?
I believe it was right around 120k
Do you really have to unbolt the rear control arms from the chassis or was that preferable?
One guy did it without loosening the control arm
thank u i will try too
How much they asking at the dealership parts and labor?
Parts and labor at a dealership your looking probably between $800-$1000
Firestone just quoted me $1600😂
Arm and a leg.
thank you
I don't tow or have anything extra on my 2013. 85,000 miles and it is sagging in back. Doing this soon.
thanks. anybody have a web site for the torque specs?
I hate seing corners having those dry leaves pines 😢😢.. and you are park inside..
This was just a customers car and is always parked outside up in the Rocky Mountains so it’s impossible to keep them pine needles out of that area lol
Good video! (SUBd)
Thanks for the sub!
That pine cone is old af needs a replacement buddy
th-cam.com/video/5cIcCfvpG8Q/w-d-xo.html and the cheerios go flying. I remember those days... Another informative DIY. Thank you sir.
Great video but the ease at which he removes so the bolts is real misleading. This a nasty job getting the strut bolts and sway bar off
Depends if you live in the snow belt or not. Up north the rust is gonna make it hard. Clean the threads first with a wire brush. Down south its not hard.
12 CRV with 160K miles. The ride really sucks and cornering is bad. This is gonna be the last Honda I ever get. The OEM struts are really weak. Not leaking - just not enough dampening. Not sure what I'm gonna replace them with yet. Usually get KYB but heard some bad stuff lately. How is the Monroe? They used to suck back 30 years ago but maybe got their act together now. How are yours holding up?
way overdue for replacement, no wonder it corners so bad lol
@@BigZeus My daughter's CX-5 has the same mileage on the struts and it still handles like a dream - Japanese parts. Honda America sources parts from US companies. I wouldn't be surprised if they OEM Monroe or Gabriel garbage.
@@gfriedman99 There is a strut made in Japan for crv, you can just buy that if you want to. Like other said, your 2012 may be due for replacement with that kind of milage and age!
@@slothypunk I picked up Bilsteins got a great deal.
It’s crazy that shops wanna be charging you 300 plus for just the rear shocks 250-300 for just labor when it took me 30-1 hr to do. Insane. Should be theft
These guys gotta eat too