Todd627
HondaSxS Club Stress Management Director
Lifetime Member
Supporting Member
I found this out the hard way a couple of weeks ago. Thought I was loosing my mind. lolJust to be clear...the stock steering shaft was made the same way, bolts had to be completely removed for the shaft to slide
This has me thinking about the installation. I wonder if it would help to align the u-joints at the top and bottom of the power steering motor? My machine is in WV right now so I can not investigate but I will at Christmas when I get back up there. I don’t have any issues with my power steering but it does wobble some when turning the wheel.
I am the guy that added the shim and mentioned it in my review. By adding an 1/8" "shim" (a scrap piece of 1 1/2" angle iron trimmed to about 3/4" on 1 side and notched to fit around the radiator support) between the crossmember and the motor bracket. Doing this raised the motor slightly which did 2 things - it gave slightly more clearance between the universal joint and the brake fluid reservoir and eliminated the binding from the motor pushing down on the shaft. I think the root cause is that the crossmember is not a precision located piece, probably +/- 2 or 3mm. This small variation is multiplied by the distance from the crossmember to the motor, so on some machines this is enough to cause issues in both of these situations. After doing this everything is tight, no movement, very smooth, and virtually silent.Avi8or I just checked and there is still some flex while turning in both directions. I read a review a while back that talked about the lower steering shaft bind (not rubbing) and the guy put a shim under the top plate of the mount and that cured his problem. I’m going to look into it more tomorrow.
I think that's what someone here was trying to say?If your wondering how well it works or if it’s worth it