Bravo2Uniform
Member
- 253
- 21
- 18
- Location
- McMinnville, TN
I learned, the hard way, an important lesson about rebuilding vehicles.
I was trying to rebuild my steering gear box. I bought a new Pitman arm, worm gear shaft, and a sector shaft rebuild kit. So I pull everything apart and start installing new parts. Everything was just fine until I tried to put the bushings in for the sector shaft. They were way tight. I just thought that something was out of tolerance, and with a little heat and freezing, they slipped into place. Next I inserted the sector shaft...or rather tried to, but it wouldn't fit. Again, thinking something was just out of tolerance, I began tinkering with how to get it to fit. I have used emery cloth before to remedy these situations...so I buffed the sector shaft...and buffed, and buffed, and buffed. Finally, about three hours into this goat roping, I got it to fit and turn as it should...right up until the time I realize the studs at one end of the bottom of the shaft simply didn't fit the worm gear.
At this point, I got the sector shaft from the scrap pile and looked at it:
The new sector shaft is the correct one for the M38A1, it has a 15/16" shaft and the studs are 1.5" on center. The old one on my M38A1 had a 7/8" shaft and the studs were 2" on center. Apparently, sometime in the past 62 years, someone put a different steering ear box on my M38A1. Now I have a useless (except to beat myself over the head with) sector shaft and get to buy a new one, along with the correct Pitman arm.
I should have been more alert, too, when I pulled the old sector shaft and found that the wavy splines on the shaft - that was from the 15/16" Pitman arm being slightly too large and deforming them. I need to pay better attention to anomalies like that.
The main learning lesson is: compare old part to new part before you start!
I was trying to rebuild my steering gear box. I bought a new Pitman arm, worm gear shaft, and a sector shaft rebuild kit. So I pull everything apart and start installing new parts. Everything was just fine until I tried to put the bushings in for the sector shaft. They were way tight. I just thought that something was out of tolerance, and with a little heat and freezing, they slipped into place. Next I inserted the sector shaft...or rather tried to, but it wouldn't fit. Again, thinking something was just out of tolerance, I began tinkering with how to get it to fit. I have used emery cloth before to remedy these situations...so I buffed the sector shaft...and buffed, and buffed, and buffed. Finally, about three hours into this goat roping, I got it to fit and turn as it should...right up until the time I realize the studs at one end of the bottom of the shaft simply didn't fit the worm gear.
At this point, I got the sector shaft from the scrap pile and looked at it:
The new sector shaft is the correct one for the M38A1, it has a 15/16" shaft and the studs are 1.5" on center. The old one on my M38A1 had a 7/8" shaft and the studs were 2" on center. Apparently, sometime in the past 62 years, someone put a different steering ear box on my M38A1. Now I have a useless (except to beat myself over the head with) sector shaft and get to buy a new one, along with the correct Pitman arm.
I should have been more alert, too, when I pulled the old sector shaft and found that the wavy splines on the shaft - that was from the 15/16" Pitman arm being slightly too large and deforming them. I need to pay better attention to anomalies like that.
The main learning lesson is: compare old part to new part before you start!