Re: Restoring Rusty
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alright already lets get to the rebuild process
so here I am using my Polish Press to gently slide the new brass? sleeve bushing thingie in the hole (hammer did not contact the bushing that's what the small wood pieces was for) the hardest part of this precission process is keeping your thumb out of the way |
Re: Restoring Rusty
How is the ball screw itself? That's where a major portion of the wear seems to take place.
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ladies I would be lying to you if I told you I counted and knew exactly how many of these bee bees came out of that ball screw
I may have counted 50 and I may have read somewhere that 54 is required, please chime in if you know |
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so she's coming along handsomely, though the supplied new washer for this adjustment bolt (foreground pointed right at you with the flat screw driver tip) did not fit so we went back with the old one as there needs to be a bit of wiggle room play in there I suppose
and we just packed the darn thing with some 30 year old Castrol bearing multipurpose grease we have been trying to get rid of since I was a teenager |
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a couple mandatory before and after shots of this Woolly Mammoth
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well if nothing else you sure do clean these parts pretty well bro
top pic: Razor Back bottom: Smooooooooth |
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I just love these before and after shots [oh sorry, millenials translation] pics, I meant pics
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can we PALEAZE get this box on the truck already
alright alright... out with the old first |
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by my estimation, assuming the power steering fluid was topped off, lets see carry the one, don't forget the belt, ... the old system weighed slightly under 712 lbs, hee hee
and yes the pitman arm is keyed wrong on the manual steering box in this pic (apparantly there are four positions it can be in - who knew, I just keyed it on the first key I saw thinking it was the only one there) don't worry that arm came off half a dozen times before I got it aligned proper |
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ok so that took me the entire afternoon from 1330 (1:30 PM people) until 1815... no not eight o'clock... 6:15 PM oh why do I even bother impressing you with my military time know how, jk
ok, good job, looks good bro, how does it drive? oh what's with all these questions? let's not split hairs here Test Drive Time - TDT |
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Nice work on the box.
Why'd you switch to manual? |
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LESSONS LEARNED so far
the broom stick ie the steering column do slide up and down so the manual box bolted right up though its not the exact same length as the power box I did re use the old rag joint but I plan on buying a new one or getting a universal joint setup, if someone has one to recommend I would really appreciate that (I think someone already did way earlier in the thread but I am too lazy to look inside my own thread) Power Steering box was about 3.5 turns end to end Manual Steering box is about 4.0 turns end to end Pitman arms be different, not so much in length or design but in hole for the splines, I think the manual is a bit smaller hole |
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Gotcha
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So how's the darn thing handle/steer now. I'm dying to know. You've answered several questions about swapping to manual now I just need to know your final results youngin.
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Hey Gregski, remember me talking about that old lady that lives up the road that has the squarebody sitting in her garage? Well I got some details on it from another neighbor....he says that it is a 74 or 75, 3/4 ton, with only about 10,000 miles on it. He said his grandpa and the old ladies dad bought similar trucks at the same time and the old ladies dad pretty much parked his....now I might have to say it with flowers!
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OK, after the test drive... Houston... We have a problem. Apparently 2 is not the middle of 4 according to GM, you see [ahem] "pops" jk the passenger side hits the steer stop and the driver side stops short of it by maybe just under an inch I think its time to blame the P.O. Looks like the previous owner replaced the outer tie rod on the driver side only but not on the passenger side So first this Power Nap aint going to take itself no how, so lemme git that out of the way and then git after it Report at 11 |
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so Rule #7 clearly states if you don't know what you is a doin' than Stare 'N Compare bro and so we is going to compare twisty turney thing on the driver side to the twisty turney thing on the passenger side first after wire wheelin' them a bit we can actually see they are a slotted, cool we can see how much threads are in them and how far apart |
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well after a couple hours and some fine "adjustments" and I use that term loosely, ha ha I thought I had the problem resolved both wheels were slightly toed in and each side went to the side an equal distance stopping just before the steer stop on either side - NICE
well but a test drive proved otherwise, the truck drove ok, but it felt like I could make tighter turns to the right than to the left so... the Greg found me a nice empty parking lot, 57 feet wide with concrete edges on either side so you could not go out of bounce and cheat sort of speak then I proceeded to make a right hand turn with the wheel turned as tight to the right as possible and I just barely made a couple perfect circles to the right within the confines of that parking lot ok, awesome now lets try the other way, so I turned the wheel 4 turns to the left, ie all the way and gave it a shot, low and behold I could not fit inside that parking lot in other words I am unable to make a U turn within 57 feet help! |
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Could your pitman arm not be clocked in the right position? I think they could be installed in different postions. Not sure if that could cause your issue though
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thanks for trying to help, I wish I baselined this with my old power steering box still on, but things seemed fine so I had no idea what problems I would have with the manual box I bought the manual box with the pitman arm to avoid these types of headaches but I still ran into issues I think its a tie rod linkage issues, but I am not sure |
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