
Originally Posted by
Naks
To update you guys:
I noticed the other day that I can turn the steering wheel to the left 1+3/4 turns, but only 1+1/2 turns to the right. So I think the vehicle's steering is not centred but always turning left slightly.
My indie mech says this is caused by the steering rod being too long, and removing about 5mm on each side should do the trick. Will ask LR to check when I take it in tomorrow.
But at the moment the slow coolant leak is more troubling since I have a 5000km trip to Namibia coming up in 2 weeks' time!
Thinking about the steering geometry, the key to centring the steering (equal turns left/right) is twofold.
One is that the length of the drag link (pitman arm on steering box to LH steering arm) needs to be the same as the distance between the plane of the pitman shaft and the steering arm - this is affected by the length of the panhard rod, and its anchorages. My experience with worn panhard rod bushes shows that it needs very little change in this length for it to show up as a marked angle at the steering wheel.
But you cannot just assume that unequal L/R turns means the drag link length is wrong, because the second factor is how far the wheel has turned. This is limited by the steering stop on the opposite side to the direction the wheels are turned. These are adjustable, and the amount of turn, because the control is on the opposite side, is also affected by the length of the track rod, in other words, the toe in/out. Which is also adjustable. There is no guarantee that these adjustments are correct, and the same in both directions, so the number of turns each way is not a good measure of steering centring. In practice, it is likely that the length of the drag link has been adjusted to get the fine adjustment (less than one tooth on the steering wheel spline) to centre the steering wheel.
Hope this makes sense.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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