johno
Well-known member
not a whole lot, mostly boring floor and firewall patching, rebuilt/ re-gasketed the carb, fixed my power steering lines. these are ripped from my c10forum thread about converting the gm pump to work with the ford steering rack.
Move along, not much worth seeing here....... my tahoe needing some attention after a brutal winter and being 11 yrs old, front calipers, rotors, pads, new cv's, alternator and looking for a new exhaust before mine falls off.
just about done with the floor and seat brackets, trying to keep it simple and pretty low profile since the seats themselves are a little tall and im about 6'1. ordered a new temp switch for the electric fans since i somehow lost the original one when i decided to put the temp gauge sender on the passenger side where the switch was and a new carb gasket kit until i decide on a new carburetor as i might try and get it on the road with this current one.
i had been planning on buying the Heidt's power steering pressure regulator to keep from blowing out the ford rack and so the steering wouldnt be so touchy at speed, but with the regulator, all of the necessary fittings and pressure hose, i was a little over $250. did some research and purchased the Borgeson pressure valve reducer for $16 instead, and i actually rather like that instead of throttling back pressure at a regulator, it actually reduces output line pressure by reducing spring pressure, (if i understand it right :character0042![]()
its basically just some thin washer shims, an extra o-ring and a clamp sleeve to protect the threads on the valve so you can put it in a vise without mucking up the threads.
removed from the power steering pump, the outer threaded adaptor came right out since there is a little spring pressure, but used a small magnet to pull the inner valve out.
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$16 worth of kit
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the stock valve has 2 shims under the nut
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according to the included chart, and referencing what the ford racks are rated for 850'ish psi, i used 4 of the 5 included shims.
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and back in the pump, obviously the outer threaded piece for the pressure hose to attach to isnt in yet but i was rushing through this last night because i was bitter and hungry from working on my daily
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hope this helps someone save some moneys! this was done with the pump still bolted to the engine in the truck $16>$250
I tried that kit with my car, it didn't produce noticeable results for me, hope you have better luck.




