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it will be out cause as you lowerd the rig, the steering arm angle has lowered also, this turning the wheel, pull wheel , and re centre i say, and make sure you have equal turns to left and right lock,
Either pull the wheel off and recentre it or do it properly at a steering place. Eventhough when you lift a vehicle you add lengthened components such as shocks and springs, not everything is done, so stress is placed on steering components and this usually results in more turn in one direction than the other.
Did you disconnect the steering at the rag joint/universal joint and reattatch it 180 degrees out of phase?
If it was simply a nudge fron the realignment then the steering would not be equal side-to-side, ie 1.5 turns one way and 3 turns the other to the limits on the worm and sector in the steering box. (or some other significanly different amount).
Disconnect the drag link (pitman end) and try to work out where the center point is in the steering at the pitman arm (spinning steering wheel side to side). Adjust the drag link to length (wheels straight ahead by eye - roughly at this stage) and check the orientation of the steering wheel.
If the steering wheel is 180 degrees or so, out then you may need to adjust the UJ/rag joint alignment (this may also have been done when the lift was installed for the same reason). If you have a splined UJ in the shaft this can be adjusted a little more accurately than the rag joint (obviously). At this point a more accurate alignment should be able to be done with the drag link adjusted for the fraction of a turn needed to get the steering wheel correctly centered.
All in all this should get everything as centered as possible.
Centering the steering wheel on the steering shaft (steering wheel end) should not be attempted if you have an airbag fitted, unless you know how to disarm the system. (covering my arse disclaimer)
George Carlin, an American Comedian said; "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realise that half of them are stupider than that".
GaryInOz wrote:Centering the steering wheel on the steering shaft (steering wheel end) should not be attempted if you have an airbag fitted, unless you know how to disarm the system. (covering my arse disclaimer)
Dont listen to him. Do it, you know you want to! C'mon, its not worse than having 5 shades of shit beaten out of you by Mike Tyson.
bruiser wrote:no air bag. Wonder if anyone here has been stupid enough to do this.
From mates in the panel beating industry, yes it has happened. It isn't the actual bag you need to be careful of, it is the igniter on the underside. The metal frame supporting it apparently can make quite a mess of you......
George Carlin, an American Comedian said; "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realise that half of them are stupider than that".
well i am wondering what has caused this as my gq does the same sort of thing when changing from a factory rim off set and 31"s to cruiser offset and 32"s my sterring is out by quarter a turn swap back and all is good.
so if there is any more info on this it would come in very handy
dwaynes wrote:well i am wondering what has caused this as my gq does the same sort of thing when changing from a factory rim off set and 31"s to cruiser offset and 32"s my sterring is out by quarter a turn swap back and all is good.
so if there is any more info on this it would come in very handy
changine tyres should not affect the position of your steering wheel, unless you talking about loosing a quater of a turn either way to lock, then you tyres coulkd be hittin something.
Dude
The distance from your steering box to your diff has decreased by about 6 inches...so does the length of the drag link if you want the steering wheel to be straight.
Andrew
dow50r wrote:Dude The distance from your steering box to your diff has decreased by about 6 inches...so does the length of the drag link if you want the steering wheel to be straight. Andrew
adjust the system via the splined section on the steering shaft/ragjoint/steering box, don;t remove the wheel from the shaft. the shaft in the column is setup to receive the steering lock mech and indicator release mech, if you rotate the shaft in relation to the wheel this lock mech will engage at a different position to what you are used to, might also affect the indicator release mech - meaning the indicators might not release when you turn a corner. the release mech is checked for correct operation during a pit inspection.