Hello,
I know opinions are like butts; everybody has at least one...but, I'm a bit confused about what to replace on my steering column & rack before reinstallation.
Turbo tie rod upgrade - seems obvious.
Rubber hockey puck replacement - seems obvious.
I see some upper/lower bearings for the steering column listed on some vendors sites. But some only list one bearing, while others list multiple.
Is there a consensus/recommendation on what should/is wise to replace while the whole thing is out?
Thanks!
You have nailed it; and do both bearings for good measure.
Just found this thread via a Google search:
http://www.914world.com/bbs2/index.php?showtopic=350223
Looks like what I was after...I hope!
So, my 914 is a '74 with an 11/73 build date. Here's the bearings, etc. from my column laid out in their basic location:
You have the good upper bearing ring. Source the VW version not the stupid Porsche price. Added screen shot.
Attached thumbnail(s)
Thanks - that's exactly what I did
I'm glad you brought this up. It is right around the corner for my current resto of the 76.
So....Can someone share the "secret sauce", or voodoo, or just plain magic to get the upper column bearing over the corrugated metal sleeve around the steering shaft?
I destroyed the brand new bearing I had ordered trying to get it on there far enough for the snap ring to slot in place Not a lot to go off of in the manual
Just wasted another $43 to get another one shipped out to me...shipping seems to be my kryptonite!
Get a piece of plastic pipe to fit outer diameter of bearing. Push bearing in with it.
On a side note, does anyone know what this bearing fits/is for? I thought it was the lower column bearing, but it's too large of a diameter. Unless it fits a 911/914-6 column...? RR called it "steering shaft support bearing".
Here's the numbers on it, not that my tired old eyes can really read them!
I think you remove the metal sleeve. If I remember correctly, that metal sleeve was an add-on part that was used when the inner plastic piece of the upper bearing failed (and they all failed). That metal sleeve took up the slop and made the steering wheel tight in the housing to help prevent the dreaded 914 steering wheel shake.
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