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PV, 120 (Amazon), 1800 General Forum for the Volvo PV, 120 and 1800 cars |
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Very light sensitive steeringViews : 1622 Replies : 25Users Viewing This Thread : |
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Feb 24th, 2024, 17:27 | #1 |
Junior Member
Last Online: Mar 4th, 2024 09:46
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: worcester
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Very light sensitive steering
Hi
My 221 (120 estate) has suffered from overlight steering for some time- making it feel dangerous over .45mph. we have changed joints, steering box, rear axle (twice) and tried many tyre combinations and increased caster to attempt a remedy. The settings are as listed- could the difference in caster cause this ( the upper wishbone bolt has seized) light steering? Volvo 221 1966 right left Toe in 2mm Castor-positive degrees 4.5 3.0 KPI- degrees 14 15.7 Camber-degrees -1.0 -1.0 Wheels 5 ½ J x 15 Volvo Steel Rims Tyres 185 R 15 Pressures Front 24 Rear 30 |
Feb 24th, 2024, 18:16 | #2 |
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Last Online: May 8th, 2024 14:32
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Location: Droitwich
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Light steering
If you are in Worcester, UK midlands, you are welcome to come round to mine, near Droitwich, see what we can find. Regards, Andy.
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Mar 4th, 2024, 09:37 | #3 |
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steering
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Mar 4th, 2024, 12:52 | #4 |
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Mar 4th, 2024, 18:12 | #5 |
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I think my Estate is set up correctly and steering is light at speed. Fingertip at 70 on a smooth uncambered road and gets even lighter if you go faster! With the big steering wheel it accentuates the lightness but you need that below about 10mph and when turning around in the road. It may not be abnormal on your car. Don't overtighten the steering box to try and fix it. It will wreck the box and spoil the steering feel. A degree or so of toe in is about right. Don't run Oş toe in. See Amazon cars website for settings. If you can stand the heavy steering when manoeuvering you can always try a smaller wheel. Try 15".
Last edited by Derek UK; Mar 4th, 2024 at 18:16. |
Mar 4th, 2024, 09:45 | #6 |
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hi
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Feb 25th, 2024, 08:49 | #7 | |
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Location: MILTON KEYNES
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Quote:
When you say light steering what exactly do you mean? Is it very responsive to any input? Does it self align back to straight or do you have to steer it back It sounds like not enough castor but the numbers are way more Have these readings come from an alignment jig ? Or home done? |
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Feb 25th, 2024, 08:55 | #8 | |
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Quote:
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Feb 25th, 2024, 15:08 | #9 |
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Is the preload on the steering shaft at the gearbox correct ? What happens if you tighten the adjustment screw an 1/8 turn ?
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Feb 25th, 2024, 17:06 | #10 |
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Last Online: Yesterday 15:47
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You need to distinguish between lightness that might originate from a lack of self centering in the steering versus excessive play in the steering which results is a dead / floaty zone of steering response.
You appear to have addressed most of the sources of excessive steering system play. You said you changed the steering box. Since vintage Volvo steering boxes are out of production does that mean you replaced the box with another used box or you attempted a partial rebuild? Play in vintage Volvo steering boxes is a fairly well known issue and can to a certain extent can be improved with the pitman arm adjustment screw which grj0 refers to. Be careful with that adjustment as excessively tight can contribute to more steering box wear. The service manual describes the correct procedure for setting the adjustment. Vintage Volvos run with the minimum amount of caster that is probably safe because of the lack power steering. Your caster angles are much more positive than factory spec which should be safe because it provides more self centering action at highway speeds; however, I expect that your steering when parking the car must now be rather heavy. Modern cars typically run with > +5 deg caster; but, have power steering to compensate for that. Your caster should be contributing to a car that has a fair amount of self centering in the steering at highway speeds. The normal tolerance for difference in the left - right caster values is 1/2 degree. Your difference is excessive. A significant difference in caster causes the car to pull to the side with less caster. People who race cars that only turn left (stock car racers) will set the steering up with differential caster. I assume you are not going oval track racing so this is not a desirable feature for you. However, aside from the tendency to pull and probably increase tire wear I don't know that the caster differential is causing overly light steering. The seized upper wishbone bolt comment has me confused. Do you mean the actual wishbone pivot bolt has seized? If so and this means that the upper wishbone is not free to move that would create too many unknown steering effects. If what you mean is that the bolt for the adjustment shim at the upper wishbone pivot point is seized (which is responsible for your caster mis match) I don't think that is the cause of your overly light steering. If it is the adjustment bolt that is seized then you do need to disassemble that side so that you can extract and replace the bolt by whatever means so that you can get the caster values to match. I would be inclined to limit my caster experiments to +3 deg or less because increased caster will cause increased load on the steering box during low speed steering which will contribute to steering box wear which is something you need to avoid with the vintage steering box. Aside from your caster mismatch, your caster values suggest that the car should have good self centering / tracking at highway speeds. All the other alignment values are consistent with Volvo specs. You could try a little more positive toe; but, this does tend to increase tire wear. So, first thing I would check is the amount of play in the steering box just because that is the easiest thing to check. It may not be completely fixable; but, you may be able to minimize it with the correct adjustment of the pitman arm shaft adjustment screw. You need to fix the seized bolt which I assume is the shim adjustment bolt because a seized wishbone pivot should not have made it through any kind of MOT inspection. |
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