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How does the horn wire route on 58-59 power steering? Jump to page : 1 Now viewing page 1 [50 messages per page] | View previous thread :: View next thread |
Forward Look Technical Discussions -> Steering and Suspension | Message format |
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | On the manual gear the wire just goes up through the box and steerer tube. Not sure how the power steering wire works. I picked up a column so now I believe I have everything to convert to power steering in my 57 plymouth. | ||
badbelair |
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Veteran Posts: 282 Location: Henderson, T.N. | I have done the same to my 57 that Im making a "christine" clone. I have the 58 power steering and cant seem to tell where it comes up through eather. I hope some one can help on this. | ||
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | A detailed exploded technical diagram would be awesome | ||
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | OK so I had to take apart a good friends steering column apart to find the answer out for myself. Can't believe no one on here knows this? Anyway, the horn wire enters the column through the hole where the turn signal wires come in (which is what I thought). It ends in the metal turn signal switch support plate with a round plastic piece with a tiny copper wheel. There is a hole in the support plate on all cars for this. Then on the actual steering wheel, there is a copper ring that contacts the tiny wheel and that is how contact is made. This ring fits below the metal ring on the wheel that has the turn signal cancelling cam. There is a rubber washer that fits between the 2 pieces. Any power steering conversion, if you want a working horn, will need to get these pieces and the wire with the tiny wheel because they are not on manual equipped cars. | ||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | Sounds like its about the same as my car then. Been having trouble assembling a steering wheel set up as well I got that contact ring yesterday and now I can put the wheel on without breaking the roller part (horn roller.JPG) (!B3H63,g!Wk~$(KGrHqMOKjcE)d0zTnIUBMlEGCWOTw~~_12.jpg) Attachments ---------------- horn roller.JPG (4KB - 173 downloads) !B3H63,g!Wk~$(KGrHqMOKjcE)d0zTnIUBMlEGCWOTw~~_12.jpg (23KB - 150 downloads) | ||
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | I think you can adjust the column a little, like move it down? Where did you find that ring? I wouldnt mind getting an NOS one myself | ||
rbmain |
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I need that contact ring too. | |||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | It was on ebay Only arrived a couple of days ago. I have to admit to trawling for 60 plym stuff daily I am missing lots of little bits and pieces It was from fmmpar, formally mitchels he has 4 for $29.95 each http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=14010... Edited by ttotired 2011-07-05 7:25 PM | ||
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | Hmmm well I wonder if its the same for 57 to 59 cars? I sure looks the same | ||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | That I cant say It came in a box with part # 1972 250 on it Nice box to for about a 50 year old box | ||
rbmain |
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I bought it just now on the chance it'll fit my 56 Plymouth. What a ridiculous way to design a horn system. | |||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | Yep Still havnt worked out how the self cancelling bit works I think there is supposed to be a sleeve or something goes on after the horn ring? I havnt seen anything like that come up though | ||
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | Yes there is a small tab on a ring that fits on the steering wheel. This is the piece that goes on over the brass ring for the horn(on power steering cars). You have to change that too, because there is a rubber washer that fits in between the 2 pieces and changes the distance the tab must be to actuate the turn signal cancelling tang on the turn signal switch assembly. The manual tab is longer because there is no washer or horn contact ring on manual cars. This power steering swap has been a pain in the butt, because I'm basically figuring it out as I go. I may post a detailed photo album of the swap when I get it all done. | ||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | My car has power steering and I had a hard time trying to explain what I needed to complete a steering wheel. I did not know there was a difference between manual and power, so That explains why my supplier had trouble working out what I needed. My fault, I didnt say it was a power steer car. Good info to know though, That means the indicator switch and everything will be different also. Why make 2 different set ups, thats stupid | ||
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | Supposedly, the turn signal switch is the same for manual or power. Its just the ring on the steering wheel that differs. | ||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | I would have thought it was different because of the little wheel that runs on the ring Wouldnt need it if the wire ran up the guts of the column? | ||
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | Nope that little wheel thingy is a separate part. As I said earlier, it fits in a little hole thats on the turn signal switch assembly. That hole is present on all cars. | ||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | cool I hadnt looked that close yet | ||
savoyboy |
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Extreme Veteran Posts: 558 Location: Central Ohio | Of course, I'm talkin 57 to 59 cars. 60 61 may be different on that, not sure | ||
Twin Fins |
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Veteran Posts: 129 Location: Ben Lomond CA in the Santa Cruz Mtns | Does anyone have a picture of what the little contact wheel and wire look like? Thanks Bruce | ||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | Yep, here it is (again, its a 60 plymouth one) (horn contact 001.jpg) Attachments ---------------- horn contact 001.jpg (249KB - 142 downloads) | ||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | Been talking about this on another thread http://www.forwardlook.net/forums/forums/thread-view.asp?tid=49867&... More pics there | ||
Twin Fins |
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Veteran Posts: 129 Location: Ben Lomond CA in the Santa Cruz Mtns | OK Now I really get it. Thanks. So then, are these contact wheels hard to come by? Is there a part number for it? Seems this is the only bit I'm lacking. | ||
chrysler300c |
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Expert ,, George Passed away July 28th 2021, He will be Missed Posts: 1295 Location: Twin Falls, Idaho | You need to get a Factory Service Manual (FSM) if you are working on your car yourself. George | ||
ttotired |
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Expert 5K+ Posts: 8445 Location: Perth Australia | I cant remember ever seeing one come up by itself Most likely need to get a s/h switch assembly, be easier anyway, as the horn wire will already be included in the harness going down the column. I would post a want in the wanted section, someone would have one, I would think also try asking Big M | ||
Twin Fins |
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Veteran Posts: 129 Location: Ben Lomond CA in the Santa Cruz Mtns | Sent an email to John @ Big M to see if he has the parts I'm needing since I bought the other power steering parts from him. Hopefully he'll be able to pull those from the same car. | ||
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