| Brand | Car Name | Model | Year | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nissan | Datsun Pick Up 4wd | — | 1985- | RHD |
A center link is the central cross-bar of a parallelogram steering linkage — the forged-steel rod that runs across the front of the chassis between the pitman arm and the idler arm, with the left and right tie rods bolted to it. It is the geometric heart of the steering system on light trucks, SUVs, vans and older rear-wheel-drive passenger cars. Modern unibody cars use rack-and-pinion steering instead and do not have a center link.
Also called: relay rod, intermediate rod, steering link, or just "the link" in factory parts catalogues. Note: a center link is NOT the same as a drag link — a drag link runs from the pitman arm directly to a steering arm on a solid-axle vehicle, with no idler arm and no tie rods attached, and is used mainly on heavy trucks and older 4×4s.
When the driver turns the steering wheel, the steering gearbox rotates the pitman arm. The pitman arm pushes or pulls one end of the center link, which pivots around the idler arm on the opposite side of the chassis. This converts the rotation of the steering shaft into a clean lateral motion across the front of the vehicle.
The pitman arm, idler arm, center link and chassis form four sides of a parallelogram (hence the name). Both front-wheel tie rods bolt onto the center link, so when the link slides sideways both wheels turn through identical angles at the same instant — eliminating the steering lag and toe-out scrubbing that would happen if each wheel were driven independently.
The center link is the geometric anchor for front-end toe. As long as its ball joints stay tight and the bar stays straight, the toe setting holds under acceleration, braking and cornering loads. Once a ball joint develops play, toe wanders under load — accelerating tire wear and producing pull or wander even after a fresh alignment.
A typical center link is a forged medium-carbon steel bar (1045 or 4140 grade) with integrated ball joints at each end and one or two tapered tie-rod sockets in the middle section. Ball joints are sealed with neoprene or polyurethane dust boots and pre-greased for life — replacement is required when the boot tears and contaminants reach the bearing surface. Length, end-fitting taper and stud thread are vehicle-specific; using a non-OE-equivalent part risks bump-steer and premature failure. MOOG, TRW, 555 and CTR all use forged steel construction for OEM-equivalent service life.
How long does a center link last?
Typical OEM service life is 150,000–250,000 km on paved roads. Rough roads, off-road use, salt corrosion or a torn ball-joint boot can cut that to under 80,000 km. Some OEM units on Toyota and Nissan light trucks routinely run past 300,000 km without replacement.
Is a center link the same as a drag link?
No. A center link is the cross-bar in a parallelogram steering linkage — it is supported between the pitman arm and the idler arm, with both left and right tie rods bolted to it. A drag link runs from the pitman arm directly to a steering arm on the wheel, has no idler arm and no tie rods attached, and is used on solid-axle vehicles such as heavy trucks and older 4×4s. The two terms are sometimes used interchangeably in casual conversation but refer to different parts.
Can I replace just the worn ball joint, or do I need the whole center link?
On almost all modern designs the ball joints are integral to the bar and are not serviceable — the whole center link is replaced as one unit. A handful of older heavy-truck designs use bolt-in or press-in ball joints that can be replaced separately; these are rare on light commercial vehicles.
Do I need a wheel alignment after replacing the center link?
Yes — a professional wheel alignment is mandatory after replacing any steering linkage component. Even with a dimensionally identical replacement part, removing and reinstalling the tie rods shifts toe, and the alignment must be reset on a rack to factory spec to prevent rapid tire wear.
Is it safe to drive with a worn center link?
For short distances at low speed, yes — but a center link that fails completely results in total loss of steering control on one or both front wheels. Replace promptly once a clunk, vibration or visible play is detected. This is a primary safety-critical steering component.
Which vehicles use a center link?
Light trucks and SUVs with conventional steering-gearbox systems: full-size pickups (Ford F-150 pre-2004, Chevy Silverado pre-2007), Nissan Pick Up / Frontier / Navara D22 (1997–2008), Toyota Hilux pre-2005, Mitsubishi L200 pre-2006, full-frame SUVs of the same era, and most light commercial vehicles built before the industry-wide switch to rack-and-pinion (around 2005–2010 depending on market).
Non. Il s'agit d'une pièce de rechange aftermarket fabriquée par SLOOP, conçue pour répondre aux spécifications d'origine. La référence OE SLSC-0024 est citée uniquement pour identifier la compatibilité véhicule — elle n'implique aucune licence, approbation ou affiliation avec quelque constructeur que ce soit. Pour des pièces d'origine, adressez-vous à votre distributeur agréé.
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