The usual "experts" replying here after a quick Google, and the health and safety police wringing their hands...
Failed power steering does not make the car more dangerous, it just makes the steering heavier since the hydraulic rams which assist the underlying manual steering system wont work any more.
Do you think the manufacturers don't consider potential hydraulic failure when designing these items?
It's not uncommon in motorsport for power-steering racks from higher-spec'd models to be used on a rally car (road legal before anyone goes there) as generally they have a quicker steering action. The 205 GTi is a common example here.
I'd suggest you remove all the PAS components (bar the rack obviously) and just plug the rack where the pipes go.
You may need to change any shared drive belts for shorter versions from a non-PAS model.
Failed power steering does not make the car more dangerous, it just makes the steering heavier since the hydraulic rams which assist the underlying manual steering system wont work any more.
Do you think the manufacturers don't consider potential hydraulic failure when designing these items?
It's not uncommon in motorsport for power-steering racks from higher-spec'd models to be used on a rally car (road legal before anyone goes there) as generally they have a quicker steering action. The 205 GTi is a common example here.
I'd suggest you remove all the PAS components (bar the rack obviously) and just plug the rack where the pipes go.
You may need to change any shared drive belts for shorter versions from a non-PAS model.
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