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Parts for your 2003 Toyota Crown-Struts
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Are struts used on the 2003 Toyota Crown?
Based on Toyota’s technical literature, struts aren’t used on the 2003 Toyota Crown. The factory New Car Features (NCF) guides and repair manuals for the late S170 (1999–2003) and early S180 (launched late 2003) Crowns specify a double wishbone front suspension and a multi‑link rear. The Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue reinforces this, listing separate shock absorbers, upper and lower control arms, and ball joints rather than MacPherson strut assemblies. Japanese domestic brochures for the Crown Royal and Athlete of the era also highlight the premium double wishbone layout, with some variants offering Adaptive Variable Suspension (AVS) or air suspension on certain grades.
This choice suits the Crown’s brief as a refined, rear‑wheel‑drive luxury sedan. A double wishbone front end provides better camber control through travel, helping the tyres maintain a broad contact patch when cornering and over uneven roads. That pays off in quieter, more composed ride quality and confident steering — the sort of behaviour Crown owners expect on long Kiwi and Aussie highways alike. It also allows engineers to tune geometry more precisely than a typical MacPherson strut, which is popular for packaging and cost but makes the damper a structural member of the steering knuckle.
Because the 2003 Crown doesn’t run struts, servicing focuses on the components it actually uses. Owners and workshops usually look to freshen dampers, bushes and joints rather than “strut replacements”.
- Front end: upper and lower control arm bushes, upper and lower ball joints, shock absorbers, and stabiliser (sway bar) links and bushes.
- Rear end: multi‑link arm bushes and joints, shock absorbers (or air struts/air springs where fitted on specific high‑grade models), and stabiliser hardware.
- Alignment: after any arm, bush or damper work, a proper four‑wheel alignment is essential to protect tyres and keep that trademark Crown ride steady.
- Noises and feel: clunks over speed humps often point to sway bar links or arm bushes, floatiness or extra brake dive usually means tired dampers.
- Intervals: in local conditions, quality dampers can be past their best by 80–120,000 km. Bushes and ball joints vary with road quality, inspect during each service.
For variants with AVS or air suspension, the same principles apply, but add checks for height sensors, air lines and compressor health. Whether it’s a Royal, Athlete or Majesta of the period, the Crown rewards correct suspension care with that smooth, planted feel it’s famous for on Aussie and New Zealand roads.
Popular questions about 2003 Toyota Crown “struts”
Does a 2003 Toyota Crown have MacPherson struts?
No. Technical references for the late S170 and early S180 models specify a double wishbone front and multi‑link rear. The dampers aren’t structural struts, they’re separate shock absorbers paired with control arms and ball joints.
Some higher trims feature AVS or air suspension, but the underlying geometry remains non‑strut.
What should be serviced instead of struts on a 2003 Crown?
Work typically targets front upper/lower control arm bushes and ball joints, front and rear shock absorbers, rear multi‑link bushes, and sway bar links and bushes. A wheel alignment should follow any such work.
On AVS or air‑equipped models, include checks of height sensors, wiring, air springs and the compressor.
Can a 2003 Crown be converted to MacPherson struts?
Practically, no. The chassis and steering knuckle are designed for double wishbones. Converting to a structural strut assembly would require major engineering with downsides to ride and geometry.
Owners chasing a sharper feel usually fit quality dampers, fresh bushes and performance‑spec sway bar links within the factory architecture.