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On Monday I noticed a little puddle under the front of the car, PAS fluid
on inspection today I have found the crimp for the banjo fitting on the power steering pump to be leaking fluid, I think this issue to old age and nothing more
there is no way I would attempt a repair to this pipe, it’s 120 BAR in there, 1740 psi
a new RHD high pressure hose is $450
please inspect this pipe next time your under there
1992 968 Coupe
1986 Honda VF1000 FII
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Great advice, this is a known weak pointy. The PS hose on the passenger side (LHD) seems to always be leaking.
Jay
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Yup, mine blew in the driveway, the day after I brought the car up to Oregon, and emptied the power steering system of all of the hydraulic fluid. And the release also bathed the lower part of engine compartment in a hydraulic fluid aerosol. Had to power wash the underside with hot water and Dawn detergent.
Chris Vais
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lucky for you guys, the LHD version 944 347 447 03 is only 285 dollars, half the price of a RHD one
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Shush, behave yourself
this was a bit more than a little leak, if I leaked that much it would be a bladder transplant, or a carefully inserted drain
1992 968 Coupe
1986 Honda VF1000 FII
2016 Volvo XC90 D5 R-Design
(This post was last modified: 02-21-2020, 05:22 PM by
Waylander.)
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A tip: go with your old hose to a hydraulic store. They will make a new one for you. Within 15 minutes you will have a new one. And for a fraction of the costs. For 50 bucks you are ready.
Ritchie owner of a '92 Coupe Tiptronic with the following standardoptions: C00, 030, 139, 249, 258, 340, 383, 387, 403, 418, 454, 490, 494, 567, 573, 650, 690, 14951
(This post was last modified: 02-21-2020, 07:19 PM by
unknown4u.)
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I have had a couple of quotes, Pirtek wanted at least £200 and needed to cut up the old one for parts
and that was the cheapest quote for a one off new one, think the price doubles when you mention Porsche,
anyway I found a company here called Power Steering Hoses, got a brand new one that was made for a 944 for £84 so that’s about $105
so I’m happy, just waiting for delivery
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New line arrived, had to cut all the protective stuff off the old one and superglue it on to the new one, but there it is in the bag
so this is $100 worth
this is about twice the size of a LHD one as it goes across the car and back, I have the old one that i will take to my local store Pirtek, I'm sure they will want a small ransom.
1992 968 Coupe
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Should have bought a new fluid tank while you were in there, the tank has a filter in it that you can’t remove or clean, I would suggest after 30 years it’s a bit cruddy
the tanks are less than $30 as they are the same on almost all late 80’s BMW’s
the hoses on the bottom of the tank leaking is almost a standard fitment
1992 968 Coupe
1986 Honda VF1000 FII
2016 Volvo XC90 D5 R-Design
(This post was last modified: 03-02-2020, 08:40 PM by
Waylander.)
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The PS fluid should be Dexron II, I have to admit in my 40 years of spannering I have never seen green pas fluid?, but then every day is a school day!
Dexron II is still available all over the place, and you only need a litre,
without research I would not say that the fluid you quote in the link above would be suitable as it is a much higher spec than the old systems,
Quote
"Porsche says that the fluid to be used in the 928 automatic transmissions and power steering systems should be Dexron II(D). Dexron is not a brand, but instead a GM fluid specification and license. If you certified that your fluid met the Dexron II(D) spec and paid GM $3000 per year, you could label your fluid as Dexron II(D). The II(D) spec became obsolete, and was replaced by Dexron III, which went thru a series of minor spec changes, ending with III(H). Dexron III was specified to be backwards-compatible with II(D), but Porsche never changed their specification (or at least not by the 1993 date in my Workshop Manual).
Dexron III(H) is now obsolete, and all GM licenses for the product have expired. There are no fluids on the market that are certified/licensed as Dexron II or III. There are fluids that are recommended for use where the Dexron II or III fluids are specified, but they are not certified or licensed as Dexron.
GM has now introduced Dexron VI, which they say is a much-improved fluid, and is backwards-compatible with Dexron II and Dexron III. The specs are much tougher to meet, and any fluid licensed as Dexron VI should fully meet all of GM's new specs. No pure dino base oil will meet the new specs, so all Dexron VI is at least a Synthetic Oil"
/Quote
1992 968 Coupe
1986 Honda VF1000 FII
2016 Volvo XC90 D5 R-Design
(This post was last modified: 03-03-2020, 12:21 PM by
Waylander.)