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Parts for your 2011 Volkswagen Amarok-Suspension bushes

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2011 Volkswagen Amarok suspension-bushes: what they do and when to replace them

Based on Volkswagen factory workshop information (ElsaWin) and the Volkswagen ETKA parts catalogue, plus well-known aftermarket technical catalogues for the Amarok platform, the 2011 Volkswagen Amarok is fitted with multiple suspension-bushes. The front runs a double-wishbone layout with rubber–metal control arm bushes and anti-roll bar bushes, while the rear uses leaf springs with eye and shackle bushes. So yes—suspension-bushes are absolutely relevant on this model.

On this Amarok, suspension-bushes are the quiet achievers. They isolate vibration, keep noise down, and allow controlled movement so the suspension can articulate without knocking the alignment out. Good bushes help it track straight on the motorway, soak up corrugations on back roads, and keep tyres wearing evenly. When they’re worn, owners often notice vague steering, clunks on bumps, wandering, or a shimmy under braking—classic signs the rubber has perished or split.

Servicing-wise, it’s smart to inspect the front control arm bushes, anti-roll bar D-bushes and links, and the rear leaf-spring eye and shackle bushes at routine intervals—especially if the ute tows, carries loads, or sees off-road work. Look for cracks, tearing, rubber separation, or oil contamination. Any excessive movement with a pry bar is a red flag. If one side is gone, the other won’t be far behind, so replacing in pairs keeps handling consistent.

When replacing, use quality OEM-equivalent bushes (polyurethane upgrades can sharpen steering but may add a touch more NVH). Critical tip: torque the control arm and leaf-spring bolts at normal ride height, not with the suspension hanging—tightening at full droop can preload the bush and lead to early failure. After any front bush work, book a proper wheel alignment to reset camber/caster and toe.

Practical signs it’s time to sort the Amarok’s suspension-bushes:

  • Clunks or squeaks over bumps or driveway entries
  • Wandering, tramlining, or nervous steering at highway speeds
  • Uneven or rapid tyre wear