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    • Energy Suspension Polyurethane Tie Rod End Boots Review | C5 Corvette

Horsepower Hub

Energy Suspension Polyurethane Tie Rod End Boots Review | C5 Corvette

in Corvette on 05/14/26

The Problem: Crumbling OEM Rubber Boots

If you own a C5 Corvette with any miles on it, there’s a good chance your tie rod end dust boots look something like what I found when I pulled mine. The factory rubber has a shelf life, and once it starts cracking and tearing, your ball joint grease is gone and dirt is working its way into the joint — fast.

Torn Moog tie rod end dust boot on C5 Corvette showing failed rubber
The original Moog dust boot — completely blown out, held together by hope and old grease.

I had recently installed a set of Moog tie rods on my C5, but before I could get a full season on them, one of the boots let go. As you can see in the photos, the rubber cracked, split, and peeled back — exposing the ball stud directly to road grime, water, and heat. Time for a real fix.

Close-up of failed rubber tie rod end boot on Moog tie rod
Mangled cracked rubber dust boot on Moog tie rod end C5 Corvette
Two angles of the same failure — rubber just doesn’t hold up under heat, road grime, and time.

The Fix: Energy Suspension Polyurethane Tie Rod End Boots

Rather than slapping another rubber boot on and crossing my fingers, I went straight to Energy Suspension Polyurethane Tie Rod End Boots. These are made from Energy Suspension’s proprietary Hyper-Flex polyurethane — the same material they’ve built their suspension bushing reputation on for decades. Poly doesn’t crack, split, or degrade the way rubber does under heat cycling and UV exposure.

Energy Suspension Polyurethane Tie Rod End Boots part number 9.13101R package
Energy Suspension part #9.13101R — two red polyurethane boots per pack, made in the USA.

Energy Suspension tie rod end boot sizing chart on package back
The back of the package has a full sizing guide — measure your socket diameter and rod end to confirm fitment before installing.
Part Details: Energy Suspension Tie Rod End Boots
Brand Energy Suspension
Part Number 9.13101R
Material Hyper-Flex Polyurethane
Color Red
Qty Per Pack 2 boots
Made In USA
Tested Application C5 Corvette / Moog outer tie rods

Old vs. New: Night and Day

Setting the old boot next to the new Energy Suspension polyurethane tie rod end boot tells the whole story. The rubber boot is stretched, oily, and collapsed. The red poly boot is crisp, firm, and dimensionally stable. Fitment on the Moog outer tie rod end was snug and secure with no modification needed.

Side by side comparison Energy Suspension polyurethane boot vs failed OEM rubber tie rod boot
Top down view red poly tie rod boot next to cracked rubber boot C5 Corvette
New Energy Suspension poly boot (red, left) next to the failed rubber boot (right). The difference in structure is obvious.

Polyurethane doesn’t care about road grime, heat, or age. That’s exactly what you want protecting your steering components.

Moog tie rod end with Energy Suspension polyurethane boot installed on bench
The Moog outer tie rod end with the new red poly boot seated and ready for reinstall on the C5 Corvette.

Installed on the C5 Corvette

Installation took only a few minutes per side. The Energy Suspension Polyurethane Tie Rod End Boot seats firmly over the tie rod socket, and the opening fits snugly around the ball stud. No clamps, no adhesive — just a solid friction fit that stays put. The bright red color also makes it easy to spot during future inspections.

Energy Suspension red polyurethane tie rod end boot installed on C5 Corvette front suspension
Installed and ready to go — the red poly boot visible in the C5 Corvette’s front suspension.

Energy Suspension tie rod boot installed on C5 Corvette viewed from rotor side
View from the rotor side — seated properly, joint protected, job done right.

Final Verdict

If you’re replacing tie rod boots on your C5 Corvette — or any performance car — skip the rubber and go straight to Energy Suspension Polyurethane Tie Rod End Boots. They fit Moog tie rod ends perfectly, they’re built to last, and you won’t be back under the car replacing cracked rubber six months later.

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