The brief
The Golf had a clunk and a rattle coming off the front over bumps and uneven roads, the kind of undercarriage noise that's easy to chase and easy to get wrong. He brought it in and the team tracked it down. The noise was the anti-roll bar drop links. The anti-roll bar runs across the front and ties the two sides of the suspension together so the car leans less in corners, and the drop links are the short rods with ball joints at each end that connect that bar to the suspension. The ball joints wear out, the joint goes loose and rattly, and you get a clunk every time the suspension moves over a bump. They're a small, common wear item, and a worn link only knocks louder, so they need changing.
The diagnosis
On the lift the front suspension got the once-over. The drop links were the culprit, the ball joints worn with play you could feel by hand, which is exactly what makes that clunk over bumps. The rest of the front, the arms, the bushes, the shocks, checked out solid. When the links on an axle have gone, you do the pair, they wear at much the same rate, and a fresh one next to a worn one just means you're back under there soon for the other side.
The work
Both front anti-roll bar drop links were unbolted and removed, and a new genuine VW-spec pair fitted, the ball joints torqued to the manual figures and seated properly. The rest of the front suspension was given a final check while everything was accessible. A road test confirmed the clunk and the rattle were gone, the front end quiet and tight over bumps and through corners.
The outcome
No more clunk or rattle from the front, the anti-roll bar working properly again, and the car flat and composed through corners. The Golf went home with the noise sorted. Worn drop links only knock louder and let the anti-roll bar work loose, so doing the pair put the front end back to quiet, the small job that makes a big difference to how the car feels.