Thank you for posting such an informative and detailed video! The shocks are definitely subpar to say the least! I am a 61 year old woman and I was able to change the rear shocks on my van because of your detailed explanation in your video! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Thank you for the torque specs. The trickiest part for me was removing the bottom of the shock. The broken one was easy to remove, but the one still intact took some extra effort.
Awesome walk thru. I advise ALL odyssey owners 2018+ to swap out those crud shacks! Mine on my 2019 are shot and as a result i have a busted left coil spring. GOOD LUCK finding those. Wonder why they're on back order? 🤔
@@ICantFixJack Do the finger test on both sides and see if there's a different clearance level. If so, yeah-you prob need new springs. I would order new ones. Just as easy to do the shocks. (There's a 3 month wait)Good thing you don't have one that's broken and can wait for them. I found one in the boneyard luckily.
Pro tip: you only need one jack to align the top mount of the shock. I just did it. All you have to do is attach the spare tire and lower the jack until there's enough upwards travel to slip it on. The spare gives you plenty of room to reach the upper shock mount bolts. Get them hand tight, raise jack back up, remove spare if you like, torque the lower shock mount, then lower it again and torque the top mount. Voila! If you don't care about the order of torquing you could just torque the upper mount when you've got it lowered to save a step.
Thanks for the video man. You got me up and running and saved a big repair bill. Appreciate you including socket sizes and torque ratings. Seems like these things are designed very poorly, possibly even intentionally so.
Great video and especially details on torque specs. I just finished installing on ‘18 Odyssey after one completely blew it’s top and spilled oil as has been a common problem for Odyssey owners. The video helped me tremendously and was able to complete the work in less than an hour of which 15 minutes was trying to take the old shock off the bottom bolt but used penetrating oil and a hammer to force it out. Thank you
Did you ever think about why the Shock was rusted apart at the top. Honda did not paint the top end of the shock thinking that the shock was going to be safe from rusting with the use of a rubber isolating boot that you discarded with the shock. For those who have not looked at your shocks, pull the rubber boot up and see if it is rusting badly. Cheap Honda not applying paint for the top few inches of the raw steel cost a way early failure of your shock needing to be replaced!
dude, invest in better jacks and stands. how many miles on those OEM shocks? did the new ones keep the rear end from dragging ass when it's loaded with people?
Really good video, straight to point, precise and has all the information one needs. I wish there was more content like this out there. It'd be great if you produced more content like this. I'll subscribe even though this is the only video posted bc this video is just that good
An aftermarket shock isn't a huge hit in my opinion. It's annoying, but with a small investment ($200 or less) you can buy all the tools and parts required to do this repair, then subsequent repairs will be $85. It's inconvenient but it's not enough for me to say the Sienna is a better value. You get a lot of car in a 2020 Odyssey for an affordable price (no Toyota Tax!) and a nicer interior imo. Only downside imo is it's a bit smaller than a Sienna.