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Did you replace the rag joint on the steering column? Did you replace it with a solid spider joint lower shafted from Twisted on this site? In my experience on two K2500 Suburbans, after rebuilding the front end, the lower steering shaft from Twisted Steel removed the remaining looseness.1996 6.5 diesel. Very loose steering, lots of free play. Also feels very heavy at slow speed turning. Any suggestions before taking to the shop. Side note: entire front end was rebuilt about 10,000 miles ago.
I disconnected the wires thats hooked to that sensor.I think Big T has a good point which I didn't know there was a solution. I'm going to take a look at Twisted Steel for that steering shaft. Re: "heavy feel" some trucks have a speed sensor on the backside of the power steering pump. This regulates the amount of assistance provided by the power steering pump. If it is faulty, you might have an issue finding the part. Keep us posted on the issue so we all can learn... good luck!
I did not replace the rag joint on the column....sounds like that is my next step. Has anyone adjusted the small set screw on top of the steering box? ran across that recommendation on YouTube.Did you replace the rag joint on the steering column? Did you replace it with a solid spider joint lower shafted from Twisted on this site? In my experience on two K2500 Suburbans, after rebuilding the front end, the lower steering shaft from Twisted Steel removed the remaining looseness.
Chris most likely machined the upper section of the shaft to fit proper. even on my GM upper section when it slides into the column and you bolt the through bolt down, there is still a tiny amount of slop. I can grab the column in that area and lift up and down and it has a slight amount of wobble to it. cranking down on that bolt wouldn't even squish the column down onto the shaft!On my ‘94 Suburban, they had a a rag joint replacement kit for like $25. I did that job and it cleaned up well. The ‘99 has a different lower steering shaft and rag joint for which there are no replacement kits. The Dorman replacement lower shaft was over $200, so I went with the solid spider joint lower shaft from Chris at Twisted Steel. My recollection was that the fit of the shaft onto the upper shaft was a tight PITA, but once it was done, the results were excellent.
Sad to hear that. Wish people weren't so tight and would pony up for domestic productionI don't bother selling them anymore, there is someone on FB using offshore parts for half the cost so I let folks use the cheap crap...
There is a procedure posted here somewhere by Ferman where he shows how to get all the end play out of the box. the main thing is to look at your pitman shaft while someone is working the wheels back and fourth. make sure the pitman shaft isn't moving side to side. a tiny amount is okish, but if there is a lot of side to side movement, no adjustment will fix that. only a new box.
just FYI, don't get a new reman box from the auto parts stores. they all use A1-Cardone which just about everything they provide as remanufactured is junk.
How does that work?
Me either.I'd check a different alignment shop if possible.
I've never heard of charging separately