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MEF192

Stabilizer Link

Brand: Ford
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Vehicle Fitment

Make Model Years Chassis Engine Position
Ford F-150 2005–
Ford F-150 2006–
Ford F-150 2007–
Ford F-150 2008–
Lincoln Mark Lt 2006–
Lincoln Mark Lt 2007–
Lincoln Mark Lt 2008–

About Stabilizer Links — function, symptoms & common questions

A stabilizer link (also called a sway bar end link) is the short connecting rod between the anti-roll bar and the strut or control arm — it transfers body-roll forces from one side of the suspension to the bar, which then loads the opposite wheel and resists roll. Every modern vehicle with an anti-roll bar has stabilizer links, typically two per axle.

Also known as: sway bar link, sway bar end link, anti-roll bar link, drop link.

How it works

Roll resistance

When the vehicle leans into a corner, the outside suspension compresses. The stabilizer link transfers that compression to the anti-roll bar, which twists and pushes down on the inside-suspension link — sharing the load between both wheels and reducing body roll.

Independent travel preservation

The link's ball joints (one at each end) allow the bar to twist freely while the suspension still articulates independently — without them, the suspension would bind.

Structure and construction

A short steel or aluminum rod with a sealed ball joint at each end (or rubber bushings on older designs). Length is critical — even a few millimeters off changes the bar's pre-load and alters handling balance.

Common failure symptoms

  • Rattling from the front suspension. A loose, metallic rattle over rough surfaces, most audible at low speed. Usually the first symptom of a worn link ball joint.
  • Excessive body roll. A snapped link disconnects the anti-roll bar entirely; the vehicle leans noticeably more in corners.
  • Loose, "floaty" handling. The vehicle responds slowly to steering input and feels unstable at highway speed.

Common questions about Stabilizer Links

How long do stabilizer links last?

Typical life is 80,000–150,000 km. Rough roads and aggressive driving shorten this. Links are one of the most common steering/suspension wear items.

Should I replace both sides at once?

Yes — they wear at similar rates and replacing only one side can create asymmetric handling.

Is alignment required after replacement?

No. Stabilizer links do not affect wheel alignment geometry.

FAQ

What vehicles use OE MEF192?

Form-fit-function tested against the OEM specification. Check the vehicle compatibility table above — it lists every confirmed make, model, year, and position. If your vehicle is not listed, contact us before ordering.

How do I order OE MEF192?

Click Request Quote or email us the OE number with your target quantity and destination. Our team confirms fitment, availability, and lead time within 1 business day. Mix-and-match across part numbers is welcome.

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