I've got two vehicles with this damper and they are both fine. Perhaps your problem is elsewhere.
Pete
I would have to advise anyone looking for a steering damper not buy a Bilstein. Sure, the damping's effective but it's always trying to self-extend against the steering, with the result being felt at the steering wheel as a pull to the right. Any self-centring the steering had before is gone. It's annoying and I'm sick of it. If anyone knows of any way to counter this effect I'd love to hear it.. But I doubt there is one other than removing it and replacing it with a self-centring damper of another brand.
I've got two vehicles with this damper and they are both fine. Perhaps your problem is elsewhere.
Pete
What does the car drive like with the steering dampner removed?
it shouldnt be trying to self-centre,, your tyres WILL though,,
are you sure its a steering damper----
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My Bilstein damper is way over 100,000kms old and is still excellent.
I am pretty sure it will not self centre (mine does not), in fact I did have an rtc damper which was rubbish, replaced it with the Bilstein.
The steering may feel a little more heavy with the Bilstein, but that's the damper operating as it should.
Possible I suppose. I'll look into it and report back. I'm surprised others aren't having the same experience. It's logical really when a damper is always trying to extend itself (no rtc) it's going to be trying to steer the car away from straight ahead. This is the second one I've had. The other one produced the same effect but I sold the vehicle shortly after so it never had the chance to really get on my nerves.
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