As I understand it, the Pitman arm shaft seal can be replaced by
draining the system, removing the nut and arm, cleaning the shaft, use and mark
a piece of PVC tubing to establish the setting depth, removing the old seal by
drilling a couple of small holes in it and threading deck screws into the holes
and pulling the old seal out—first noting the depth the old seal was set
on the PVC. Then clean/polish the shaft, cut a piece of shim stock to
wrap around the threads and rough/exposed outer section of the arm, lube the
shaft and slip the new seal in over the shim stock. Use the piece of PVC or
conduit to seat the new seal to the proper depth. If the shaft is
corroded or damaged in the area of the seal, one can’t expect the seal to
do its job. Cleanup of the bore also makes sense to minimize leaks around
the OD of the seal.
There is a special tool for this, but its functions are fairly
straightforward and described above. Sure beats pulling the unit.
The service manual has a section on this procedure—using the special
tool. I bought and installed a pint or so of power steering goo and added
it to the P/S reservoir on my ’55 Chrysler (I think they were all the
same in 1955) to try and solve leakage from the upper weep hole on the P/S unit
on my ’55 Chrysler. It is a viscosity improver and probably has
mouse milk to improve seal action. It worked, was cheap and no downside.
I had to bail P/S fluid from the reservoir to make room for the whole pint.
You might try that when you refill. And turn the steering wheel to hard
left to purge air from the system after refilling.
Good luck—and thanks for bringing something to the forum other
than the sadly ruined cherry ’57 Belvedere. I remember trying to
start a ’57 Fury in subzero weather in Des Moines in 1955. I think there was
ice from the fuel tank to both carbs. It took overnight in a warm garage
and several cans of Heet to clear that, but it was a beautiful car.
Rich Barber
Brentwood,
CA
1955 Chrysler 300
1986 Chrysler Le Baron T&C Convertible
Date:
Fri, 22 Jun 2007 20:10:45 -0700
From:
Bob Moore <remoore@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject:
Re: 1955 power steering leak
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Hi
Chuck,
That
sleeve is called a shaft saver or something like that, I had one on a
pinion
one time from a car I'm trying to save, and basically- it's an
emergency
effort that didn't work in this case! Is there any side to
side/lateral
play in the arm? Could be a worn shaft in the area of the
seal,
who knows- the kit may work for you! If the box is not too loose. I
think
the problem is if you try to use the same size seal with sleeve it
wears
it out a little too fast outside of design parameters!
Good
luck,
Bob
(my
'58 Dodge P/S box doesn't leak, just no assist!)
_____
From:
Forward Look Mopar Discussion List
[mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Charles M. Deyoe Jr.
Sent:
Thursday, June 21, 2007 6:23 AM
To:
L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject:
[FWDLK] 1955 power steering leak
Hi
Everyone I have been trying to stop the leak at the pitman arm shaft for
a
few years now and have installed a few seals. This weekend I am going to
try
installing a new seal again with a shim that I was told would take care
of
it.{ I can't remember the name of if it slides over the shaft and you
then
install the seal}
I
was wondering if anyone else with this problem has had any luck with one
of
these seals with this shim or is there another way to repair this with
out
removing the power steering unit as this is the only leak and the
steering
seems to work great.
I
also have an issue with my brakes I rebuilt the booster and master about a
year
and half ago and the brakes work great but when I first press on the
pedal
there is a lot of play I have to pump the pedal a little then the
brakes
feel and work fine. Is there air in the line ? or is there some
think
else I should be checking. I have a big car show in August in Stowe
Vermont and just want to take care of these few problems
first.
Chuck
Deyoe 1955 New Yorker