strokeherace
Member
Previously my 08 JKU had steering issues and I ended up with a huge transmission cooler on it to help. That was on 35’s and now I’m doing a 13 JKU with 37’s. At what point did you guys go to hydraulic assistance?
This is why I keep capped fittings so I can cap the lines at the ram and/or steering box and still have power steering. I would say if you did just get the big bore box… get the one that’s setup for ram assist in the event you want to add it later.I’ll say I’m one of the few that recommend just the PSC big bore without any hydro assist. I run a stock box and it takes some work. My brother in his JK is able to push his 37s with the PSC on/off road without issue.
Only reason I fear hydro assist is it’s another fail point and I have seen it fail three times now. Two sheered of mounts and a busted line.
37” tires should be little issue for a PSC by itself.
You eventually will get used to it however I would not suggest just upgrading a stabilizer and rather, just run a PSC ram. That light feeling is due to the fact the system has constant positive pressure and doesn’t require a lot of input. The reason you’re not getting much feedback from the road is because of that positive pressure. Depending on what control arms you’re running and your front drive shaft, you can get away with adding a bit more caster and that might help a bit.After braking my sector shaft on Fordyce, I also upgraded to the PSC Adventure Kit. I'm running 37's on a 2018 JKU Rubicon. The Big Bore XD Heavy duty box is massive and steering has become super light and smooth. I am now trying to figure out replacement for the steering stabilizer. I feel I need to do something because at highway speed the steering just feels light and I really don't feel any input from the road. I'm not sure how else to describe it. I'm not sure if the ram assist would correct this or possibly the Fox ATS Steering stabilizer. It might just be something that I will get used to. Any thought?
Tire pressure at 40 on 37’s? Jesus. How are your kidneys?The toe was checked during my last alignment which was over a year ago. Tire pressure is around 40. That makes since about what you are saying about the stabilizer.
A year is a long time in my book… parts wear, toe changes… 40lbs is high as shit… go down to 28ish. Then drive it.The toe was checked during my last alignment which was over a year ago. Tire pressure is around 40. That makes since about what you are saying about the stabilizer.
Yuh… I’d start by getting that down to 28-30 Psi and see where that takes you. 40 is excessive even for stock tires.The toe was checked during my last alignment which was over a year ago. Tire pressure is around 40. That makes since about what you are saying about the stabilizer.
Honestly the difference in 28-40 in terms of gas mileage is negligible at best and at worst… you’re fucking up some expensive tires and what marginal fuel savings you might be getting…. Won’t pay for a new set of tires.Lol. Gas is expensive in California. I guess I'll drop the pressure.