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Try spraying a quality penetrating oil on the 2 u-joints in the coupler that connects the rack to the steering column. It's above the drivers side half shaft. If the steering really loosens up soon after spraying the oil on, then you know where the problem is. A seized coupler will feel tight, then Ok, then tight again as you turn the wheel around.

 

I have seen lots of seized couplers. I've never seen a failed rack, and this is on cars with 150-250k miles on them.

 

Pumps can go if someone is an idiot and keeps the wheel held hard over at full lock for extended periods, like when doing donuts in the snow. A failed pump will give consistanly hard steering.

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I doubt it's your rack. But putting that Lucas crap in there might cause it to fail - probably kill the pump too :rolleyes:.

 

NEVER use anything but pure, clean ATF in Subaru PS systems. NEVER!

 

If you can put a bottle of garbage in the pump - why can't you spray down the steering coupler like we have sugested instead of questioning our experience and doing stupid things with chemicals that will quite possibly cause more harm than good?

 

There is no such thing as a "repair in a bottle". Repairs are accomplished with tools by experienced mechanics.....

 

GD

Edited by GeneralDisorder
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Have a friend turn the wheel in the car while you watch the belts. Engine running of course.

Rack or pump both sound possible, but a slipping belt is more common for hard steering. Only thing is that would usually make an obvious squealing noise. The next possibility is a slipping harmonic balancer pulley. The outer section of the pulley will separate from the inner section and will slip when under load, and that is usually silent. (Or you at least don't hear it over the engine running.)

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+3 on the steering column u-joints. Had just this problem and fixed it with PB Blaster in liberal amounts and a little time to let it work.

 

Make sure you lube both joints. I didn't see the lower one the first time as it's a bit obscured from view and had to go through this again. This happened in the spring and hasn't reoccurred since.

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REALLY hard to turn but it goes in 'spurts" ez, hard, ez, hard spaced approx. evenly, thnx
That fits for a binding coupler u-joint and nothing else.

 

You may want to flush the power steering system now that you put that lucas "miracle in a bottle" crap in. It works by softening and swelling seals, which will make junk seals work for a bit (long enough to sell the car, that's the point of all those products) but will eat good seals and make them junk.

 

Use a baster to suck the fluid out of the resevoir, take the short return hose off the pipe leading up to the resevoir and kink the rubber hose to keep fluid in the resevoir. Put an extra lenth of hose on the end of the pipe coming up along side the engine and run that down into a bucket. Crank the rack lock to lock a few times with the engine off to clear most of the fluid out of the rack and into the bucket, then put a funnel in the resevoir and pour ATF into it while an assistant cranks the wheel lock to lock with the engine running. After pouring at least a quart through and having it blow out into the bucket, shut the motor off, hook the short hose from the resevoir back to the return line, and fill the resevoir back up. Run it for a while, the pump will whine because of all the air bubbles trapped in the fluid. Turn the wheels lock to lock to make sure the rack is full again while it's running. Then shut it off, wait a while, and top off the resevoir. That should flush out most of the lucas stuff.

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The PB will work for a while, but the binding will come back because the joints have rust inside them now. I'd reccomend replacing it if you plan on keeping the car for a while. Or you could do a once a month spraydown and keep going that way. A coupler is a lot cheaper and easier to do than replacing the rack or pump. Just make sure you keep the steering wheel lined up with the rack when you take the coupler off, if you let it spin round or get it off a turn the clockspring connector for the airbag, horn, and cruise control will get broken off.

 

Glad you flushed out the fluid. That's an object lesson in not throwing miracle fixes at an undiagnosed problem.

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