Slightly OT: what is the last best analog sports car with hydraulic power steering |
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Slightly OT: what is the last best analog sports car with hydraulic power steering |
Superhawk996 |
Jan 26 2020, 08:52 AM
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#21
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914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 5,778 Joined: 25-August 18 From: Woods of N. Idaho Member No.: 22,428 Region Association: Galt's Gulch |
@Tdskip Not so much. Other than he agrees with you. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) Althouh it is a good video primer on EPAS there is no technical discussion in there that explains why EPAS would have less feedback. Let's not forget that hydraulic power assist is not magic. For years everyone complained that all power assist was (IMG:style_emoticons/default/stromberg.gif) . The video author talked about damping but the fact is the damping of an EPAS rack is far more adjustable than the damping of a hydraulic system which is also damped by the fluid dynamics of steering fluid flows though tiny orrifices and power steering hydraulic hose expansion/contraction. EPAS most definately can be made to have communicative feedback. As was posted earlier there are a technical reasons EPAS isn't as communicative as a manual rack. The primary reasons: 1) The nature of mechanical leverage is working against any assisted steering (EPAS or hydraulic) with respect to up stream feedback from the road. The purpose of the system is to make steering efforts lighter. This is done with mechanical leverage. In the example of a gear, if we have a 4:1 gear, you get 4 times the output for 1 unit of input. Same principle pertains wheter the leverage comes from gearing, hydraulics, or electric motor assit. In the case of steering, the unit of input torque is at the steering wheel and the 4 units of output is at the road wheels. Now work that backwards from the road. 1 unit of input of road force (or feedback / communication with the road) is now only 1/4 of what you feel at the steering wheel. 2) Customer demand for "light" steering efforts. Though this may not be you (or me), take a quick informal "survey" on your next drive. How many people do you see driving with one hand? Wrist flopped over the steering wheel at 12:00? One or two fingers? Driving with knee while eating a burger or sipping Starbuck? How about driving with hands a 10 & 2? All these these jacked up steering positions give the driver less mechanical advantage on the steering wheel than 9 & 3 and then translates to the need to "boost" the steering assist further just to make them happy. The demand for more assist to lighten steering efforts works directly agaist communicative feedback . . . basically goes back to point #1 above. I'm actually torn on whether this is #1 or #2 thing that degrades road feel & communication feedback. The customer data is clear, most drivers want LESS effort and LESS road feedback. As sports car guys, we are the oddballs. The more any brand like BMW or Porsche caters to non-drivers that are simply buying their cars as a lifestyle statement, and want nice light steering efforts so they don't have to expend as much effort to drive, the worse your steering feel will get. Likewise the older your buying demographic gets, the worse your steering feel will get. 3) One of the downsides of EPAS is a controls / motor issue that can occur if too much damping is taken out of the system and the controls are made to be too responsive. The assist motor will go into an instability which is just a small amplitude uncontrolled oscillation (i.e. steering shudder). I'm not talking about massive steering wheel movement, but only a perceptible vibration in the steering wheel that shouldn't be there. It is a byproduct of the system compliances & tuning. Damping is added in the controls algorithm to address this. Damping is variable as a tunable parameter at the discretion of the engineer tuning it. Hydraulic steering can have the same shudder problem but to a lesser degree because the system is less "stiff". In the case of hydraulic's the damping is added by tuning hose, diameter, lengths, and expansion characteristics or via orrifice sizes within the control valve. There is actually more compliance in a hydrauic system due to hoses, brackets, etc. that make the hydraulic system less prone to instability (i.e. steering shudder) but belive me when I say I've spent a lot of time dealing with hydraulic power steering moan, shudder, and assymetric efforts. 4) The location of the EPAS motor location matters. Column mounted EPAS systems typically feel worse, more numb, and communicate less road feedback. Rack mounted EPAS tends to be more communicative in my experience. Regarless, either are highly dependent on how they were tuned and what the rest of the system steering system dynamics are (low/high scrub radius, high friction ball joints, high friction struts, etc.) that can seriously degrade road feel too. OK, I'm tired of typing. If anyone really cares, we can deep dive further (IMG:style_emoticons/default/sad.gif) |
914_teener |
Jan 26 2020, 10:08 AM
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#22
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914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 5,197 Joined: 31-August 08 From: So. Cal Member No.: 9,489 Region Association: Southern California |
As far as the Cayman is concerned, the 987.2 had hydrualic...the 981 had steer by wire.....so anything before 2014.
The Cayman had problems...mostly tracked cars.....with overheating with the fluid. As far and the feeling...I prefer the hudraulic rack although I get why they went to an electric one. |
Steve |
Jan 26 2020, 10:12 AM
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#23
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914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 5,573 Joined: 14-June 03 From: Orange County, CA Member No.: 822 Region Association: Southern California |
993 Manuel
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Tdskip |
Jan 26 2020, 10:14 AM
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#24
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 3,686 Joined: 1-December 17 From: soCal Member No.: 21,666 Region Association: None |
I think this would have to be on the shortlist ...
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Superhawk996 |
Jan 26 2020, 12:38 PM
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#25
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914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 5,778 Joined: 25-August 18 From: Woods of N. Idaho Member No.: 22,428 Region Association: Galt's Gulch |
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Superhawk996 |
Jan 26 2020, 01:37 PM
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#26
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914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 5,778 Joined: 25-August 18 From: Woods of N. Idaho Member No.: 22,428 Region Association: Galt's Gulch |
As far as the Cayman is concerned, the 987.2 had hydrualic...the 981 had steer by wire.....so anything before 2014. Just a nuance Cayman isn't steer by wire. It is EPAS. Electric Power Assisted Steering. Steer by wire implies that that there is no mechanical linkage between the steering wheel and the steering actuation. Nissan was 1st to market with a quasi steer by wire system and also had to recall shortly after it was launched. https://www.popularmechanics.com/cars/a9940...ystem-16276674/ The reason I say quasi steer by wire is that by Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards the steering must have a mechanical linkage. In the case of the Nissan, it had a mechanical linkage that could be reengaged if the steer by wire portion of the system failed. The main reason for steer by wire is that it becomes a path toward autonomous vehicles by easily enabling elimination of the steering column altogether. |
horizontally-opposed |
Jan 26 2020, 05:21 PM
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#27
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 3,431 Joined: 12-May 04 From: San Francisco Member No.: 2,058 Region Association: None |
This used to be a hard question to answer. "Best for what?" I'd mumble as an out.
Then I spent 1,200~ miles on great roads in a Carrera GT. Once enough of the intimidation factor wore off (it took about 200-300 miles), it was like a bigger 914. With a Judd V10. On acid. 66,000-mile CGT video, with great sounds: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtJmt5q67rk Black CGT drifted up a mountain pass in Europe; too bad about the talking over the audio... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajqSQ1NyQ_4 And in case you forgot the Judd, or never heard one in a sport car… (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wub.gif) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lYrjKQqOfs Back down in the realm of reality, the 986/996 had very sweet steering (better, I thought than the much-lauded E36 M3 steering) with the 987/997 being very similar though no longer 1:1. |
Maltese Falcon |
Jan 26 2020, 05:46 PM
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#28
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 4,637 Joined: 14-September 04 From: Mulholland SoCal Member No.: 2,755 Region Association: None |
This used to be a hard question to answer. "Best for what?" I'd mumble as an out. Then I spent 1,200~ miles in a Carrera GT (took about 200-300 miles for the intimidation factor to wear off) after limited seat time on two tracks. Out on a good road, it's like a bigger 914, with a Judd V10. On acid. 66,000-mile CGT video, with great sounds: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtJmt5q67rk Black CGT drifted up a mountain pass in Europe; too bad about the talking over the audio... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajqSQ1NyQ_4 And in case you forgot the Judd, or never heard one in a sport car… (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wub.gif) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lYrjKQqOfs Back down in the realm of reality, the 986/996 had very sweet steering (better, I thought than the much-lauded E36 M3 steering) with the 987/997 being very similar though no longer 1:1. CGT...I would just install a Fuel Safe (brand) fuel cell & an OMP sourced fire suppression sys Perfect Driver ! |
914_teener |
Jan 27 2020, 01:40 PM
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#29
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914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 5,197 Joined: 31-August 08 From: So. Cal Member No.: 9,489 Region Association: Southern California |
As far as the Cayman is concerned, the 987.2 had hydrualic...the 981 had steer by wire.....so anything before 2014. Just a nuance Cayman isn't steer by wire. It is EPAS. Electric Power Assisted Steering. Steer by wire implies that that there is no mechanical linkage between the steering wheel and the steering actuation. Nissan was 1st to market with a quasi steer by wire system and also had to recall shortly after it was launched. https://www.popularmechanics.com/cars/a9940...ystem-16276674/ The reason I say quasi steer by wire is that by Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards the steering must have a mechanical linkage. In the case of the Nissan, it had a mechanical linkage that could be reengaged if the steer by wire portion of the system failed. The main reason for steer by wire is that it becomes a path toward autonomous vehicles by easily enabling elimination of the steering column altogether. Ah....yes thanks for the clarification.! Good info. I'd say for the "feel" factor with respect to the EPA....the EPAS version in the 981 feels different in that it feels a little"twitchy" to me. Always a subjective thing. |
Rikyrat |
May 7 2020, 10:18 AM
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#30
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Member Group: Members Posts: 58 Joined: 30-January 19 From: Phoenix Member No.: 22,844 Region Association: None |
I just read this, and had a chuckle.
A few years back I took my 2010 Acura TL, to the service station across the street from my office, needed to change the oil. When I went to pick it up, they had noted that the had 25k miles on it, and should have the power steering system flushed, I look at the guy with a puzzled look in my and stated "But, it has electric steering", he replied, it still needs to be flushed. Needless to say, I never went back. I wonder how many people he duped with that one. I like my EPAS on my new TLX, at low speeds in a parking lot, it is very easy to maneuver, but as you get to highway speeds, it get tighter and tighter, the things is that you don't really even notice. Sorta like the speed adaptive sound system. I entertained the idea of putting it into my teener, but have not decided to do it. It seems like it would be fairly simple to do, since the steering column, takes a zig to the right, before it goes into the fire wall. If one were to pick up a spare column, the it would be completely reversible, if you decided to sell it. |
ClayPerrine |
May 7 2020, 12:59 PM
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#31
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Life's been good to me so far..... Group: Admin Posts: 15,436 Joined: 11-September 03 From: Hurst, TX. Member No.: 1,143 Region Association: NineFourteenerVille |
993 Manuel (IMG:style_emoticons/default/agree.gif) 1995 or older 993 with a manual transmission. Air cooled, cable throttle, and almost no electronic nannies. The only nanny it has is ABS. The reason for 95 or below, no drive block connected to the ECU. |
burton73 |
May 7 2020, 02:28 PM
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#32
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burton73 Group: Members Posts: 3,510 Joined: 2-January 07 From: Los Angeles Member No.: 7,414 Region Association: Southern California |
Power-steering racks. In my experience, power-steering racks seem to leak more often in later cars. I am not sure if the pump runs at a higher pressure or if there is some other design issue, but my early 928s’ power-steering racks have been trouble-free, while my later cars have all required at least one new or rebuilt rack.
928 is the ticket. My Shark 1986.5 Original Paint. 44,000 miles Bob B |
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