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    Results 1 to 19 of 19
    1. #1
      Join Date
      May 2019
      Posts
      3

      Selection of the steering box

      Hello guys!
      I am looking for a solution with power steering box and steering pump for my 1971 442 Olds clone.
      Reading the forum, I realized that there are several solutions: Turn one, Lee, Delphi, steering box from Jeep and from Nascar cars.
      Please share your experience: which option is the best?
      And which steering pump is better to use?

    2. #2
      Join Date
      Jan 2006
      Posts
      385
      Country Flag: United States
      I went with the Borgeson 12.7:1 box. Awesome piece for the money. Absolutely zero play on center.

      However, for best results, I'd also upgrade to their U-joint steering shaft as well...

      http://nastyz28.com/threads/intermed...3#post-3621231
      1971 Camaro
      GM HT383, MiniRam EFI, AFR heads
      "8-speed" trans (700R4 + Gear Vendors OD)

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Feb 2013
      Posts
      1,414
      Country Flag: United States
      Is the car primarily being used primarily for street driving? Or do you plan to do more track events?

      On our street builds, we've been using the Borgeson steering boxes (12.7:1 ratio) and been extremely happy. I have one on my Firebird and it has fantastic driving characteristics (and when I want to get a little spirited, it's more than capable of that). https://www.ridetech.com/products/st...-steering-box/

      On the track oriented biulds, we see/use alot of the Turn One boxes. They have the option to run either the 12.7:1 ratio or a 10:1. https://www.ridetech.com/products/st...-steering-box/

      Let me know if you have any questions!


      Ridetech Suspsension
      Tech Specialist
      Phone: 812.481.4734

      Project Fox
      1979 Trans Am

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Oct 2011
      Location
      Philipsburg, Pa
      Posts
      528
      Country Flag: United States
      At UMI we use and prefer the Turn One gears.

      12.7:1 is most popular for street performance use.
      Technical Support
      UMI Performance, Inc.
      [email protected]
      814.343.6315

      Join us on Facebook!

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Jul 2006
      Location
      Pensacola, FL
      Posts
      1,263
      Country Flag: United States
      I love the turn one box. I balked at the price years ago, but after driving one with that box, I ordered it the next day. I previously had an iroc box in the car.
      Scott

    6. #6
      Join Date
      May 2011
      Location
      Chippewa Falls, WI
      Posts
      290
      Country Flag: United States
      Best of the best is Turn One. If your on a budget the jeep box is where it is at. I have been through stock, a jeep box, 12-1, 10-1, 8-1 turn one boxes. They are all huge gains over the other as long as the end use is considered.
      Justin N.

      1966 Chevelle
      1992 GMC Typhoon
      1989 Jeep Wrangler CJ 6.0 Twin Turbo
      1981 Jeep CJ7

    7. #7
      Join Date
      May 2019
      Posts
      3
      Thank you all for the answers!
      It seems Turn One is the best choice. II think I'll buy this one: https://www.turnone-steering.com/col...formance-model



      But I have several questions:
      1) As I see Turn One is custom-built to order and it's a double-edged sword. It turns out that everything is very dependent on the specific employee who will build the box for me.
      Did they have quality problems and did anyone come across defective boxes? I know that they have a guarantee, but I live in Russia. Logistic cost of return will be commensurate with the cost of the new box
      2) Which steering pump is right for Turn One box, and what additional parts will I need to put on my 1971 Olds?


    8. #8
      Join Date
      Mar 2018
      Posts
      68
      I recently pulled the box in my 1970 Nova and sent it to BenchWorks in Arizona (based on a rec from this site). They upped the ratio to 12:1 and I love it. Definitely not too tight. They also gave it a tighter/direct feel.

    9. #9
      Join Date
      Aug 2004
      Location
      Mesa, Az
      Posts
      196
      I have used 3 of the Lee boxes on my performance cars and have used 2 of Bench Works on daily driver cars. The Bench Works box works perfect for daily drivers!!
      -Paul
      1969 Camaro "Reckn8"- LS7/C4 Front and Rear
      1965 Oldsmobile F/85 LS6 W/Maggie, 6-speed,Ride Tech, Baer brakes
      1978 Blazer 2 wheel drive with LS power
      1965 VW bug. All original
      1968 GMC short box
      1964 Buick Riviera

    10. #10
      Join Date
      Sep 2010
      Location
      corona,ca.
      Posts
      1,078
      Country Flag: United States
      Turn one.
      Spend the cash,or find a used one on ebay.
      The best gear box you can get.
      72 chevelle.

    11. #11
      Join Date
      Oct 2006
      Posts
      634
      Country Flag: United States
      69 el Camino SC&C Stage III.

      Lee 14:1, 800 series with a 30 pound valve. Grant 13" steering wheel..

      Going down the road it feeds back like a manual box, after a turn, the steering wheel spins back to center super fast but parking is easy and the ratio is fast. I prefer 14:1 on the street, it makes those long highway drives more comfortable. I like to run 8 degrees of positive caster, 1 degree of negative camber with a very slight toe out. This is the box to do it with on the street. Out roads here in Western Pa are much like a road race course..

    12. #12
      Join Date
      Dec 2011
      Location
      Oregon coast
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      I'm using the Jeep steering box. Very happy with the results. It's inexpensive and feels nice and tight and responsive. One thing i did run into though is that I had problems with the brass inserts not seating well in the steering box ports and leaking. I went with the adapter fitting and haven't had a problem since. Id say for cruising, corner carving and some infrequent competition stuff the jeep box is more than enough.

    13. #13
      Join Date
      Oct 2006
      Posts
      634
      Country Flag: United States
      I see Turn One offers a 10:1 ratio. I wonder what that would be like on the street?

    14. #14
      Join Date
      Nov 2007
      Location
      Melbourne FL
      Posts
      20
      what makes the turn one so much better than the lee or borgeson?
      my only real experience is with a zq8 box

    15. #15
      Join Date
      Dec 2004
      Posts
      31
      Quote Originally Posted by TrendSetter View Post
      what makes the turn one so much better than the lee or borgeson?
      my only real experience is with a zq8 box
      I'd like to know this as well. My 69 is a manual and I need power steering, damn shoulders are killing me. I'm okay with a 800 box if you can really tell the difference.

    16. #16
      Join Date
      Sep 2010
      Location
      corona,ca.
      Posts
      1,078
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by YankeeWhite View Post
      I'd like to know this as well. My 69 is a manual and I need power steering, damn shoulders are killing me. I'm okay with a 800 box if you can really tell the difference.
      I daily drive an 05 tahoe,and that's the closest way of describing how the dephi boxes feel.
      Tahoe's have the rack and pinion valving boxes,except they have different mounting
      the turn one boxes are special in terms of how they mount,and internally,ratios.
      72 chevelle.

    17. #17
      Join Date
      Oct 2004
      Location
      IL/TN
      Posts
      909
      Country Flag: United States
      the reality is that there is only so much that you can do to a steering box, names can be thrown left and right the bottom line is that just throwing names without details is just that, what style box is being referred to? we use The PT700 as a budget box call it a super Jeep box, and it's priced equal to the new imports and are available as a direct replacement, we also have 670 boxes in 12.7:1, 10:1 and 8:1, the 670 box does need metric O-ring fittings and an adapter rag joint for pre-78 cars and is 6 # lighter than a 700/800 box, the 670 box is very nice R&P servo, tight on center feel.
      https://www.protouringf-body.com "doing what they say can't be done"

    18. #18
      Join Date
      Oct 2006
      Posts
      634
      Country Flag: United States
      I talked to a guy who knows Lee and he told me the whole process that they go through to blueprint one of there boxes. Wow, its a lot of work done by special people who have that touch to the work..
      I have the Lee 800, three ear, 14:1, with a 30 lb valve and a Grant 12.5" steering wheel because I like a heavy feel and a fast positive snap back. I am in halfway decent shape from working construction my whole life but I did have to add 200 push ups to my weekly work out routine after installing this box so I could handle it more comfortably..

    19. #19
      Join Date
      Dec 2006
      Location
      Out of the Burbs of Detroit to SoCal, then onto my ancestral homeland, the woods of Cascadia
      Posts
      1,753
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by TrendSetter View Post
      what makes the turn one so much better than the lee or borgeson?
      my only real experience is with a zq8 box
      I don't know that any of the builders you list is better or worse than the others. I've personally bought 2 steering boxes from Lee, back when he still owned it. I actually spoke to him in both cases, described the car and what I wanted, and he made suggestions about ratio and actuation force. In both cases, I heeded his advice and am well pleased with the results. Both are 800 boxes.

      Call any of themdescribe your situation, and ask for input
      Greg Fast
      (yes, the last name is spelled correctly)

      1970 Camaro RS Clone
      1984 el Camino
      1973 MGB vintage E/Prod race car
      (Soon to be an SCCA H/Prod limited prep)



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