09-16-2022, 11:12 AM | #1 |
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Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: South East Ohio
Posts: 644
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Pitman arm Question
1970 C-30-manual steering
Changing out my steering gear is teaching me a few things that I thought I knew. My steering gear appears to be original equipment as does my rag joint and I'm uncertain about the pitman arm. About 4k miles ago I replaced the original steering components spindle to spindle (including A-arms, rotors, bearings, calipers, brake lines) for the purpose of installing disc brakes on the front with what I believe was a 93 one ton front end. Everything that had a ball joint end was replaced with a MOOG component. I aligned it and everything seemed to work well. Now I'm chasing down some slop on the steering and the things I haven't replaced are getting replaced, steering gear, rag joint and maybe the pitman arm. I've been looking over the replacement pitman arms available for a manual steering box (K6130) and the replacements all seem to come with a grease fitting. My pitman arm seems to be a solid end stud and not a ball joint end where it goes into the center link. So since it is a solid piece, what purpose does the grease fitting serve? My old pitman arm doesn't have a grease fitting and I suspect that the arm is good and usable. If I don't have to replace it I don't believe I should because I've seen some crappy replacements offered and the swing in price on them is unbelievable ($11-$135). There can't be that much difference in quality, the average cost being about $60. The steering gear needed replaced but I think the pitman is good. I've been reading that many pitman arms are considered a non-wear item and generally not the culprit in a sloppy steering wheel. I'm going to look over the idler and tie rods (though I think replacing the gear and rag will fix it), but I'm not sure what to look for in the pitman arm to determine if it needs replaced. The grease fitting is perplexing. Any thoughts? |
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