TOYOTA/LEXUS 4333039195 BALL JOINT
Product Specifications
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333039195 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333039265 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4334039235 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333039245 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4334039225 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333039255 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333039295 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4334039245 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4334039175 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333029105 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333029215 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333029305 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333029345 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333039835 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | 4333030445 |
| TOYOTA/LEXUS | J4333039295 |
| LYNXAUTO | C1068LR |
| MILES | DB35106 |
The BALL JOINT is a load-bearing articulating joint that connects the suspension control arm to the steering knuckle, allowing the knuckle to rotate freely about the steering axis during steering inputs while simultaneously transmitting the full lateral, longitudinal, and vertical suspension loads between the knuckle and the control arm through the suspension's travel range. The assembly consists of a hardened chromium steel ball stud whose spherical head is retained in a precisely matched PTFE-lined or acetal polymer bearing socket under a calibrated preload, housed in a forged or cold-formed steel housing that is either pressed into the control arm bore, bolted to the control arm flange, or integrated into the arm as a factory-assembled unit. A rubber or thermoplastic dust boot sealed at both ends retains a lifetime grease fill within the socket cavity and prevents road water, salt, and abrasive debris from contacting the ball surface — the boot is the joint's primary protection against premature wear and its integrity is the single most important factor in service life. The ball stud's tapered shank presses into the conical bore of the steering knuckle steering arm and is secured by a castle nut and split pin, transmitting all suspension forces through the interference fit of the taper without relying on the nut thread for load carrying.
This unit — TOYOTA/LEXUS 4333039195 — is manufactured to OEM-equivalent specifications: ball stud taper angle and diameter, socket bearing insert material and preload, housing press-fit or bolt-flange geometry for control arm installation, ball stud articulation angle and torque, dust boot material and clamp profile, and overall stud-to-housing length are matched to the original part. Supplied as a direct replacement for standard fitment. Available wholesale from 3.59 USD, MOQ 1 pcs, production lead time 30-45 days.
Ball joints fail through socket bearing insert wear producing axial and radial play in the ball stud, boot failure allowing abrasive contamination to accelerate socket wear, and ball stud corrosion in road salt environments that prevents the taper from seating correctly in the knuckle bore. A ball joint with measurable axial play is a critical safety item — under heavy braking or cornering loads the worn joint deflects, altering the wheel's camber and caster angles dynamically and producing unpredictable vehicle response; at the extreme end of wear, a ball joint that has lost all socket preload can disengage from the knuckle under rebound travel, resulting in complete loss of steering control of the affected wheel.
- Support the lower control arm on a workshop jack before disconnecting the ball joint — the control arm is under suspension spring load and will drop abruptly when the ball stud taper is released from the knuckle; support the arm at its natural ride-height position before releasing the taper to prevent sudden arm drop that over-extends the CV joint and stretches brake hoses and ABS wiring beyond their travel limit.
- Release the ball stud taper using the correct ball joint separator tool — never strike the knuckle boss with a hammer to free the taper; hammer blows crack the knuckle boss, damage the new ball joint's taper bore, and transmit shock loads to the wheel bearing; use a jaw-type or fork-type separator that applies progressive wedge force to the taper joint until it releases cleanly with a distinctive pop.
- On press-fit ball joints, use a ball joint press tool of the correct cup dimensions to remove and install the joint in the control arm bore — pressing the old joint out and the new joint in with incorrect cup sizes collapses the housing, distorts the control arm bore, or damages the new boot; confirm the press cup outer diameter matches the control arm bore diameter and the driver cup diameter matches the joint housing outer diameter before applying press force.
- Clean the knuckle taper bore thoroughly before installing the new ball stud — corrosion, debris, and metal transfer from the old taper must be removed with a fine file or bore reamer; a contaminated or deformed taper bore prevents the new ball stud from seating to its full contact depth, reducing the effective thread engagement of the castle nut and creating a stress concentration at the shallow-seated taper that risks stud pull-through under cornering loads.
- Torque the castle nut to OEM specification with the suspension loaded at ride height — tightening the nut with the suspension hanging pre-twists the boot and loads the socket in a direction that accelerates bearing insert wear; always load the suspension to ride height before final torquing by placing a jack under the control arm; fit a new split pin and always advance the nut to the next alignment position — never back off to align the split pin hole.
- Install the new BALL JOINT (TOYOTA/LEXUS 4333039195), torque the castle nut and fit a new split pin, lower the vehicle to ride height and torque any press-fit retention bolt to specification, have a four-wheel alignment performed immediately — ball joint replacement affects camber and caster — and confirm alignment is within OEM specification before the vehicle is returned to service.
| Part | Reason for Combined Replacement |
|---|---|
| Lower Control Arm OEM ref. varies by suspension design | On vehicles where the lower ball joint is supplied pre-pressed into the control arm as a non-serviceable integrated assembly, the complete control arm must be replaced when the ball joint has worn. On vehicles with separately replaceable press-fit ball joints, inspect the control arm bushing compliance bushes for rubber cracking and loss of compliance while the arm is fully accessible during ball joint replacement — worn bushings produce the same clunking and imprecise steering symptoms as a worn ball joint and should be replaced simultaneously to avoid a repeat control arm removal within a short interval. |
| Stabiliser Bar Link OEM ref. varies by axle position | The stabiliser bar drop link connects the stabiliser bar to the lower control arm at a point adjacent to the ball joint and is fully accessible during ball joint replacement. Drop links have the same ball joint construction as the suspension ball joint and wear at a similar rate — inspect the drop link ball joints for play and boot condition while the control arm is accessible, and replace any showing wear or boot damage simultaneously with the ball joint. |
| Steering Knuckle OEM ref. varies by axle position | Repeated ball joint replacements on the same vehicle can enlarge or damage the conical taper bore in the steering knuckle steering arm through repeated taper seating and removal cycles. If the knuckle taper bore shows deformation, elongation, or surface damage from previous ball joint hammer removal, the bore cannot grip the new ball stud taper correctly and the risk of stud pull-through under load is significantly elevated. Inspect and replace the knuckle if taper bore damage is found rather than fitting a new ball joint to a compromised bore. |