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Z's don't have collapsable steering shafts...


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I noticed from some of the power steering conversions I looked at that the Z car didn't come with a collapsable steering shaft. This makes me think of how safe it would be from the front if there was a collision, collapsing the front. In that case, the shaft/collumn would be forced back through the firewall, and the steering wheel would hit you in the chest.

 

Right?

 

I'm bringing this up because i wanna do the Mustang rack conversion, and I think I should include the collapsable shaft, as Alsil put in his writeup:

 

http://zcar.netdojo.com/steering.htm

 

If anyone can help here, which Borgeson shaft would I want to get, or which /make/model truck was the one Alsil got for his car? He doesn't know which truck it was himself.

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Guest Zachb55

thats a good point, and i have been thinking about some of the safety issues of the Z, and there are a few... oh well, just dont speed and do crazy stuff and you'll be fine... :( ok so only when your not at the track, and people are around.. :twisted:

 

-Zach

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Guest Zachb55

and so that part will collapse before your rib cage does? it seemed pretty darn strong to me... but i just hope not to be in that situation anyways.

 

-Zach

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I'm referring to the solid rod shaft that goes from the plastic coupler to the rack. That part is a solid rod and doesn't look like it will collapse. The collapseable part mentioned in another reply must be hidden under the dash or something.

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That's why they call it a collapsible steering column - the column collapses and the steering shaft inside slides on splines as Blueovalz mentioned.

 

It's required by law and the Z car's design is similar to many other vehicles. BTW, having one (the column or the shaft) move without the other wouldn't do much good. It's not so much the shaft moving rearward and striking the driver as it is the driver moving forward and hitting the wheel/column.

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Guest 280Tom'z

actually from when i was in my wreck last year when i hit that bridge my stering wheel just bent and broke and the column did colaspe to a point where i could move the wheel a considerable amount

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Guest tom sixbey

if you really wanted to, you could cut that lower column and have a machine shop extend the splines at the bottom of the column all of the way up the shaft. the upper potion would need to be a female spline, and would sleeve over the lower portion like a driveshaft spline - thereby creating a loose slip-tube that could collapse under an impact.

 

You might want to go to an rock climber/ off road specialist for pieces like this, as they build and sell collapseable suspension and steering components like this every day.

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