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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 1:15 pm 
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Turbo Slant 6
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Hi all,

I am looking at different steering boxes, and I see that there are now three 16:1 manual boxes available

Firmfeel

PST

Flaming river.

Any experience or opinions on any of these choices?

Thanks

Greg


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 1:25 pm 
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Unless you're building a special-purpose racecar, my answer would be "none of them". On a street-driven car, even in a lightweight early A-body with a lightweight aluminum 225 engine,
a 16:1 nonpower box (no matter who makes or sells it) efficiently saps all the joy and fun out of driving the car. If you want to be able to drive around town and park the car without sweating and cursing yourself and the car, and you don't want to have to white-knuckle the steering wheel on the highway because the car's all twitchy (because if you dial in any positive caster for self-centring action the car will be an even worse bear at low speeds) forget that 16:1 box idea.

20:1 is where it's at: ideal balance between steering effort and number of steering wheel turns lock-to-lock.

Slant-6 A-bodies got bushings in their steering boxes. B-bodies and V8 A-bodies got roller bearings. The bushing/bearing boxes interchange with each other, but the bearing boxes are nicer. Get with Firm Feel or Steer and Gear for a built 20:1 box with bearings and you'll be all smiles.

(If you do decide you really want a 16:1 box, there is no good reason to go for anything other than a correctly-built Chrysler box; its aluminum housing weighs less than the iron/steel Flaming River type boxes, and there is no weakness or other drawback to the aluminum housing)

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Last edited by SlantSixDan on Wed Aug 12, 2020 6:39 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 2:29 pm 
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EFI Slant 6

Joined: Fri May 11, 2007 7:32 pm
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Location: Mountain View, CA
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Or........

If you are looking for something a little more lively and are looking to reduce the weight of your front end, there are aluminium 16:1 factory boxes. Firm Feel did have new gears for them back in the day, dunno about anymore. We've done a couple of cars (one with electronic steering assist built inline) with them and enjoyed them quite a bit with aggressive/modern steering settings (-1* Camber 7-9* Caster with just a touch of toe and modern tires of 275 aspect and up) They are a great vendor and know their stuff.
Borgeson has come out with 14.7:1 Power boxes that are 7lbs lighter than the stock power boxes and quite a few of us have quickened them up with Q/R arms as well, netting a great driving package.

I personally have no experience with PST, or Flaming River outside of their steering columns, which are pretty good.


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 5:58 pm 
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Flaming River is actually 19:1 and that one works very well but is a few lbs heavier than a stock box, if you care. 16:1 can be a bit much depending on steering wheel size, your body strength, and car wt over the front whls. With stock body and drivetrain, it will be tough to steer. I agree that 19 or 20:1 is a great choice for anything but quite light cars or racecars. I have a 16:1 factory box in my 64 Dart, which works great - light car. Firmfeel has the 16:1 chucks to go in the stock box and they build a nice unit. 20:1 stock box in my 68 Dart - very enjoyable. I am about to put 20:1 in my 62 Valiant. I like 15" steering wheels personally.

Lou

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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 7:00 pm 
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Turbo Slant 6
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So, this is why I am asking about a 16:1 manual box.

To start, I am going to get this up and running with my old and tired 24:1 box, but assuming all is well, I will want something that steers a bit faster.

If this works, steering effort will not be a problem.


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 7:02 pm 
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Electric power steer, eh? Interesting. Lettuce know how it works out.

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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 7:15 pm 
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Turbo Slant 6
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It is a bit of an experiment, and I will be pleased to report the results.

Part of why I had the Barracuda parked in the garage was due to several seemingly unsolvable problems.

So, I am coming back to wrenching with a willingness to try new ideas.

Thanks

Greg


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 7:16 pm 
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Turbo Slant 6
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Location: Crestline, CA
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Dan-o wrote:
Or........

If you are looking for something a little more lively and are looking to reduce the weight of your front end, there are aluminium 16:1 factory boxes. Firm Feel did have new gears for them back in the day, dunno about anymore. We've done a couple of cars (one with electronic steering assist built inline) with them and enjoyed them quite a bit with aggressive/modern steering settings (-1* Camber 7-9* Caster with just a touch of toe and modern tires of 275 aspect and up) They are a great vendor and know their stuff.
Borgeson has come out with 14.7:1 Power boxes that are 7lbs lighter than the stock power boxes and quite a few of us have quickened them up with Q/R arms as well, netting a great driving package.

I personally have no experience with PST, or Flaming River outside of their steering columns, which are pretty good.


Dan-o, where in AZ are you at? I am in beautiful Gilbert


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 12, 2020 8:50 pm 
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Turbo Slant 6
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Currently working out some electric power assist for my slant powered S10.
It's steering through a 3 turns lock to lock rack and pinion from an Intrepid.
Cheap, simple and much tidier setup than hydraulics.


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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2020 5:46 am 
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I had bought one of these for the Grüne Hölle Dart a few years back.

https://www.rockauto.com/en/moreinfo.ph ... 35&jsn=439

Installed it last year. Have tightened the center adjustment maybe 3-4 times so far. Have ~3000 Miles.. Spirited mountain driving / Highway driving and 1 AutoX on the box so far. Was the cheapest of the bunch but If you are set on the 16:1 I would spring for Firm feel or PST.



I like the 16:1 Box... Typical dudes want everything so easy that they are not willing to use some muscle when they park. It's my gym Membership... Besides I drive more than park.

Greg

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PostPosted: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:35 am 
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EFI Slant 6

Joined: Fri May 11, 2007 7:32 pm
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Location: Mountain View, CA
Car Model: Road Runner
gmader wrote:
Dan-o, where in AZ are you at? I am in beautiful Gilbert


Was in Yuma when I owned my own shop, up in NorCal these days building prototype UAV's for NASA.


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PostPosted: Sun Aug 16, 2020 6:13 am 
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This retro-fit electric steering assist concept applied to an A body is quite interesting. However I'm not sure where the room comes from under a stock dashboard stuffed with wire, clutch & brake brackets, and other errata to house such a device device.

Retro fitting a power rack to an S 10 is also interesting as well. Not sure if such a conversion into an A body is achievable without bump steer problems could be easily cobbled. I'm no fabricator, and don't have access to a pile of old used parts for experimental fitment for such a conversion. If such a conversion could be done reasonably easily with inexpensive parts, that would be a great upgrade to eliminate the factory Christ-Craft feel steering all pee-rack & pinion equipped vehicles have.

For those out there with bottomless pockets, the rage seams to be to plunk an old body atop a full custom built frame fitted with modern suspension, high powered engines & 8 speed transmissions capable of great 1/4 mile times, handling, stopping and high fuel mileage.

What was I thinking; probably for the same dough, one could pick up new or a slightly used Hell Cat, and tape over the side markers for that same driving experience.

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 17, 2020 5:20 pm 
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Location: San Antonio, Texas
Car Model: 1964 Valiant
Some cars used an electric hydraulic pump but those use a lot of amps if you don't have a controller that senses steering wheel angle changes/vehicle speed. I think these are mostly obsolete now. One of the Toyota MR2 models did that. The pump pressure also varied according to vehicle speed so that it pumped the most pressure at parking speeds. I believe some Ford/Volvo electric power steering pump is common, but it has a reputation of being noisy. You can find these in salvage yards : https://www.wmsracing.com/wmsweb/volvo- ... tails.html

If you're an electronics hacker you might find a sensor that can track steering wheel input. Also, as the GPS sender units are cheap, I thought that it could calculate vehicle speed. An Arduino is sufficient to do the computer work. When the vehicle is parked or at a stop light, the pump would be off. There might not be much to this controller, probably could sell them for quite a bit. I might actually look into this myself as I'm that kind of nerd.

https://amzn.to/31Zpqnv


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 18, 2020 4:41 pm 
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Location: San Antonio, Texas
Car Model: 1964 Valiant
I think only the GPS could be used to control the pressure by speed. I don't know how the Volvo system worked. I've read that the pumps can draw up to 80 amps - that number might be incorrect as its pretty high. There are also 12v hydraulic pumps that can be repurposed


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 11, 2020 9:31 pm 
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Joined: Tue Dec 12, 2006 7:44 pm
Posts: 790
Location: New England
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Greg Ondayko wrote:
I had bought one of these for the Grüne Hölle Dart a few years back.

https://www.rockauto.com/en/moreinfo.ph ... 35&jsn=439

Installed it last year. Have tightened the center adjustment maybe 3-4 times so far. Have ~3000 Miles.. Spirited mountain driving / Highway driving and 1 AutoX on the box so far. Was the cheapest of the bunch but If you are set on the 16:1 I would spring for Firm feel or PST.



I like the 16:1 Box... Typical dudes want everything so easy that they are not willing to use some muscle when they park. It's my gym Membership... Besides I drive more than park.

Greg

I agree, as a large American blue collar worker, 16:1 has a great road feel and is not unparkable. I have a Mopar 16:1 in my 340 car, and a Flaming River in my slant car.


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