Steering & Suspension Noises Explained
Clunks, creaks, and whines each point to different parts — ball joints, bushings, sway bar links, or power steering. Learn what your noise means.
Updated July 15, 2026
Steering & Suspension Noises Explained
If you’ve ever stared at your tire sidewall, dashboard warning light, or shop invoice and wondered what a term actually meant, this guide is for you. We’ll walk through steering and suspension noises in plain, non-mechanic language. At our New Britain shop, we get this question from drivers across central Connecticut — from folks in Newington driving down the East Street corridor to Farmington commuters coming off I-84. The honest answer isn’t always the answer the internet gives you.
If you’d rather just have us take a look, our Steering & Suspension team handles this every day. But it’s worth understanding the basics first.

The Practical Answer
- Clunks: ball joints, sway bar links
- Creaks: bushings
- Whine: power steering
Every one of these matters for a different reason. Let’s walk through the ones that trip most drivers up.
Why This Matters for New Britain Drivers
Connecticut roads see it all — pothole-heavy spring, road-salt winter, hot humid summer, and everything in between. That environment shapes when a repair or service actually pays off versus when it can safely wait. We factor local conditions into every recommendation we make at the shop.
What to Watch For
- When it’s a safety issue
- Bridge to the hub
Getting these details right saves money down the road. Skipping them almost always costs more later.
MAP-Standard Honest Recommendations
At our shop we follow Motorist Assurance Program (MAP) standards. That means we only recommend the work that your vehicle actually needs — not what pads our invoice. If a component is within spec, we tell you it’s within spec. If it’s borderline, we explain the trade-off honestly and let you decide.
Thirty-plus years serving New Britain has taught us that trust is built one honest inspection at a time. That’s why our neighbors keep coming back.
Ready for a Look?
Every service we do includes a free multi-point Performance Review, so we can flag anything else that needs attention before it becomes a bigger problem. Our Steering & Suspension page has the full details, and you can book an appointment online or call 860-305-5234.