PRODUCT DETAILS
Energy Suspension Rear Trailing Arm Bushings for 90-93 Integra
The rear trailing arm bushings on a DA Integra take a beating, and after 30-plus years the factory rubber is cracked and worn, letting the rear of the car move around under load. That's what makes a worn Integra feel loose in the back, especially mid-corner or under braking, as the rear toe shifts around instead of staying put. This Energy Suspension set replaces that tired rubber with polyurethane that holds the trailing arms in position so your rear suspension does what it's supposed to.
The payoff is a rear end that stays planted. Rear toe holds steady through corners, the car tracks straighter, and the whole back of the car feels tighter and more predictable. It matters even more if you're lowered or running wider-than-stock wheels and tires, since those setups put more load on the bushings and make worn rubber feel even sloppier. One set covers both the left and right side.
Important: this is the reuse-your-metal version
Read this before you order. This kit is polyurethane only, it does not include new metal sleeves or shells. You press the old rubber bushings out of your trailing arms and reuse all the original metal hardware (that's why every listing says "must reuse all metal parts"). So take your time pressing the old bushings out and don't damage the sleeves, because you need them to complete the install. If your factory metal is rusted or chewed up, sort that out before you start. The kit also includes a polyurethane torque mount insert.
| Part numbers | 16.7107R (red), 16.7107G (black) |
| Type | Rear trailing arm bushing set, polyurethane |
| Fitment | 1990-1993 Acura Integra (DA): GS, GS-R, LS, RS |
| Material | Energy Suspension Hyper-Flex polyurethane |
| Includes | Trailing arm bushings, polyurethane torque mount insert, grease |
| Note | Must reuse all original metal hardware |
| Coverage | One set does both sides |
One thing to know going in: poly is firmer than the old rubber, so you'll feel a bit more of the road through the chassis. On a car you actually drive hard, that's the trade you want. Use plenty of the included grease on install to keep things quiet and stop the squeak poly is known for. Red and black are the same hardness, so it's purely a color call, the black is graphite-impregnated to be slightly more self-lubricating while red is just the look. Confirm your car is a 90-93 Integra before ordering, since the 94-01 (DC2) uses different parts.