Anti Roll Bar Bushes
- Porsche 991 Carrera 2 3.0L (370 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Carrera 2S 3.0L (420 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Carrera 4 3.0L (370 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Carrera 4S 3.0L (420 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Cabriolet 2 3.0L (370 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Cabriolet 2S 3.0L (420 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Cabriolet 4 3.0L (370 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Cabriolet 4S 3.0L (420 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Targa 4 3.0L (370 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Targa 4S 3.0L (420 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Turbo Coupe 3.8L (540 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Turbo S Coupe 3.8L (580 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Turbo Cabriolet 3.8L (540 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Turbo S Cabriolet 3.8L (580 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 Speedster 4.0L (510Bhp)
- Porsche 991 GT3 4.0L (500 Bhp) / GT3 RS 4.0L (520 Bhp)
- Porsche 991 GT2 RS 3.8L PDK (700 bhp)



Anti-Roll Bars (ARB’s) play an important role in a vehicle’s suspension system, helping to reduce body roll by transferring cornering load from one side of a vehicle to the other.
Often mounted to the vehicle’s chassis with rubber bushes, these bushes ensure the bar works as intended. To prevent the anti-roll bar from moving laterally within its mounts when turning, OE manufacturers will either bond the bushes to the bar, add dead-stops to the bar itself, or rely solely on the clamping pressure of the rubber.
But what happens when those bushes wear and need to be replaced? Often anti-roll bars with bonded bushes come as a costly complete assembly, so the alternative is to fit a more cost-effective unbonded polyurethane replacement, like the many we offer.
In most cases, friction from the bush will prevent any side-to-side bar movement. Still, when turning aggressively or cornering at higher speeds, a laterally shifting anti-roll bar decreases the efficiency and effectiveness of the bar, changing the dynamics of your suspension system in unpredictable ways. It also poses the risk of the bar fouling on other areas of the vehicle or suspension system.


