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I have seen a lot of discussion on the steering feel of our cars.
Mine has always felt a bit vague with a soft feel and lack of centering force.
It sounds like I am far from alone in this observation.
I've been paying attention and trying to learn all I can about the steering and suspension that might affect this issue and I have some question I cannot seem to find an answer to...
I seem to remember reading somewhere that the boost on our power steering is speed sensitive, reducing boost at higher speeds.
Is this true?
How does it work?
Is there a failure mode or malfunction of this feature that might lead to overboost at higher speeds and the vague, soft feel that some have observed?
Always anxious to learn....
Thanks,
Jamie
Early '92 black coupe with classic grey interior, LSD, Original 17" C2 Turbo wheels, sport seats, and recessed hood badge. Recent upgrade to RSB Stage 1 with air box mod, Yellow Koni Sport adjustable shocks and struts, stiffer springs, RSB SS clutch and brake lines, and 968Forums sun screen...
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Steering feel seems to vary between cars. I'd like mine to have a little less assist, one option I was given was to have my pump rebuilt to put out less pressure, that would also increase steering rack life. Changing out your rubber rack bushing to something more solid like derlin should help decrease some of the vagueness.
Current:
2016 Cayman S
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94 968 Cab 6 Spd. Black/Cashmere D1R SC
86.5 928 Garnet Red Metallic
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Could be an allignment issue as well. This can effect the steering feel quite a bit.
92 968 cab (cobalt blue/black top/grey int)
87 944S
19 Audi A6 3.0T
03 Toyota Tundra
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Can anybody confirm the speed sensitive boost thing?
I did some searching on the web and found some discussion on the Pelican Parts forum about how the 944/951 have this feature.
It was stated that for those cars the boost is turned off above about 40 mph.
True for the 968?
Jamie
Early '92 black coupe with classic grey interior, LSD, Original 17" C2 Turbo wheels, sport seats, and recessed hood badge. Recent upgrade to RSB Stage 1 with air box mod, Yellow Koni Sport adjustable shocks and struts, stiffer springs, RSB SS clutch and brake lines, and 968Forums sun screen...
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Over the past few months the steering on my car seems to have deteriorated. Recently I have been experiencing play in the steering wheel. At speeds over 80mph I can move the wheel 2 or 3 degrees with no affect to the direction of travel. It seems to get worse as the speeds increase. Not a fun place to be....
In an attempt to rectify the problem I have got new front control arm rear bushes, they went on last night. I will test the car at the weekend with them on and let you know the result. The new bushes are original Porsche items. When I visually compared the old with the new bushes, it appears as if the inner section of the old ones have rotated through nearly 90 degrees in the outer housing, meaning that the two rubber sections were where the two solid sections should be. It may be that the steering geometry changes as the speed increases as a result of this.
I'll let you know.
Cheers
Oily
'94 968 Sport - Guards Red
'07 BMW K1200 R Sport - Blue
(This post was last modified: 05-13-2010, 06:50 PM by
Oily.)
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I have always had mixed feelings about my steering. Sometimes it feels right on and other times the steering seems distracted by the smallest thing, hunting around the various differences in the pavement surface.
I am currently having the steering rack rebuilt. So, it will be interesting to see how that effects things. I have tried various tires and have the factory 17" wheels. So, I continue to search for the solution.
94 968 coupe, grand prix white exterior, black interior
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Thicker fluid would most likely increase the pressure in the system and blow out the rack seals. The best bet for less steering assist is an underdrive pully or have the pump rebuilt to put out less PSI.
Current:
2016 Cayman S
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86.5 928 Garnet Red Metallic
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So nobody knows anything about this speed dependent boost on the power steering...
Searching the PET, I found something called a "pressure transmitter" 944 606 209 00 with a wiring harness as part of the PS system of a 944S. Nothing like it is found in the 968 PET.
Anybody have any idea what this does?
Jamie
Early '92 black coupe with classic grey interior, LSD, Original 17" C2 Turbo wheels, sport seats, and recessed hood badge. Recent upgrade to RSB Stage 1 with air box mod, Yellow Koni Sport adjustable shocks and struts, stiffer springs, RSB SS clutch and brake lines, and 968Forums sun screen...
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The 944S was the introduction of 16v to the 4cyl. For whatever reason they decided they needed to kick up the throttle when the steering wheel went to full turn. It was actually a pretty bad decision, they power wire wasn't fused and it rubbed in the engine bay and caused a few fires, which lead to a recall to reroute the wire and put a inline fuse on the circuit. Most people with a S have a regular pump on there now.
The onyl speed sensitve part of the pump would be how fast the engine is turning, it doesn't know how fast you are going. I suppose the pump could decrease pressure when it starts spinning at a certain RPM. But just guessing there.
Current:
2016 Cayman S
Former:
94 968 Cab 6 Spd. Black/Cashmere D1R SC
86.5 928 Garnet Red Metallic
(This post was last modified: 05-14-2010, 04:07 PM by
banditsc.)
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OK.
I did some more searching this afternoon and found what I remember reading many years ago.
This is from a sales brochure from an '89 944
Sounds like a nice design.
Even though it says "when driving at higher speeds it again automatically adjusts itself to the lower level torsional forces", I think this is just referring to the nonlinear nature of the boost that is shown in the graph.
I could never understand how the boost was supposed to react to the car's speed, but this explains that it is an indirect relatonship.
Does the 968 behave similarly?
I would love to know more about how the system accomplishes this, and the possible failure modes.
Jamie
Early '92 black coupe with classic grey interior, LSD, Original 17" C2 Turbo wheels, sport seats, and recessed hood badge. Recent upgrade to RSB Stage 1 with air box mod, Yellow Koni Sport adjustable shocks and struts, stiffer springs, RSB SS clutch and brake lines, and 968Forums sun screen...