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Parts for your 2012 Subaru Tribeca-Suspension bushes

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2012 Subaru Tribeca suspension bushes — what they do and when to replace them

Yes, the 2012 Subaru Tribeca absolutely uses suspension bushes. Technical sources including the Subaru Service Manual for MY2012 Tribeca (Chassis: Front Suspension and Rear Suspension sections on STIS) and the Subaru electronic parts catalogue list multiple bushes throughout the platform. The Tribeca runs a MacPherson-strut front end with lower control arm bushes and stabiliser bar (sway bar) bushes, and a multi-link/double-wishbone style rear with lateral link, trailing arm, and crossmember/subframe bushes. These rubber mounts are fitted from factory and are considered normal wear items.

Suspension bushes are the quiet achievers: they isolate vibration, allow the arms to pivot smoothly, keep alignment steady under load, and cut down noise and harshness. When fresh, they help the Tribeca track straight, steer cleanly, and ride comfortably over corrugations and city potholes alike.

  • Common wear clues: clunks over bumps, steering vagueness, shimmy on braking, uneven tyre wear, and perished or cracked rubber on visual inspection.
  • Environmental factors: heat, UV, oil contamination, towing, rough roads, and higher kilometres all speed up bush degradation.

As part of regular servicing, it’s smart to inspect all bushes every 20,000 km or annually. Look for splitting, tearing, and rubber separating from the sleeves. Sway bar D-bushes and link bushes often go first and are a quick, cost-effective win for tightening the feel. If a control arm rear bush is torn or leaking (on fluid-filled styles), replace it promptly to protect tyres and prevent alignment drift.

  • Replace in axle pairs where practical to keep handling balanced.
  • Always torque pivot bolts at normal ride height to avoid pre-loading the rubber.
  • Book a four-wheel alignment after bush or arm replacement.

Expect many Tribeca bushes to last 80,000–160,000 km, though plenty vary by usage. OEM-style rubber is ideal for factory ride and NVH. Polyurethane can sharpen response but may add a touch of road feel/noise — choose based on how the Tribeca is driven. Some bushes are serviceable with a press