Tinker
Active Member
I previously posted about a hydro-boost question related to replacing my stock Saginaw steering box with a Plews-Edlemann 3000. I'm running into another issue on this steering box replacement.
This Plews-Edelmann is a quick-ratio box; 2.75 lock-to-lock. With wheels straight, the steering wheel is 1/8-turn off-center to the right. I thought I could over-come this with pulling and re-centering the steering wheel, put that doesn't appear to be possible with this design. The power ring in the column is "keyed" to the steering wheel casting due to a power or ground point on the ring that fits in a hole on the steering wheel casting. That same ground point also fits through a specific hole on the pressure plate, and the pressure plate that holds the power ring in the column is keyed to the shaft. So, I can't change the clock position of the steering wheel without moving the whole internal pressure plate and power ring assembly, and I can't do that without grinding down one of the plate teeth so that it will fit the splines of the shaft. Would grinding off a tooth and re-centering the plate cause other issues? Like with the turn signal cam?
I need to have the truck aligned and I know they can straighten everything, but I think that will mean losing steering throw of 1/8 turn to the left, correct? So it will end up being 1.5 turns to the right and 1.25 turns to the left. So, if I have the centering issue fixed by alignment, am I correct that I'll lose some throw to one side and, if so, is that a problem? Any thoughts here?
Worthy of note that I remember now that either my new pitman arm or the steering box was keyed differently than the stock Saginaw; the pitman arm angles of the old and new boxes didn't match. At the time, I assumed that was either by design due to a different steering ratio, or that the box did not come pre-centered. Now I'm wondering if the pitman arm is the source of the problem.
Thanks for your help.
This Plews-Edelmann is a quick-ratio box; 2.75 lock-to-lock. With wheels straight, the steering wheel is 1/8-turn off-center to the right. I thought I could over-come this with pulling and re-centering the steering wheel, put that doesn't appear to be possible with this design. The power ring in the column is "keyed" to the steering wheel casting due to a power or ground point on the ring that fits in a hole on the steering wheel casting. That same ground point also fits through a specific hole on the pressure plate, and the pressure plate that holds the power ring in the column is keyed to the shaft. So, I can't change the clock position of the steering wheel without moving the whole internal pressure plate and power ring assembly, and I can't do that without grinding down one of the plate teeth so that it will fit the splines of the shaft. Would grinding off a tooth and re-centering the plate cause other issues? Like with the turn signal cam?
I need to have the truck aligned and I know they can straighten everything, but I think that will mean losing steering throw of 1/8 turn to the left, correct? So it will end up being 1.5 turns to the right and 1.25 turns to the left. So, if I have the centering issue fixed by alignment, am I correct that I'll lose some throw to one side and, if so, is that a problem? Any thoughts here?
Worthy of note that I remember now that either my new pitman arm or the steering box was keyed differently than the stock Saginaw; the pitman arm angles of the old and new boxes didn't match. At the time, I assumed that was either by design due to a different steering ratio, or that the box did not come pre-centered. Now I'm wondering if the pitman arm is the source of the problem.
Thanks for your help.