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Power Steering O-ring repair documented

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I posted here a few weeks ago about a power steering leak and the search for an o-ring to fix it. I did not find a procedure, so here is my offering. A little background first. I noticed my truck dripping fluid and upon further inspection discovered it to be power steering fluid. The steering box and pump, along with any other components near them, were drenched in fluid making detection of the exact source difficult. I cleaned things up and checked and it appeared to be coming from the space between the reservoir and the pump. After a brief search on TDR I discovered that a few other folks had the some problem and tracked it to the O-ring between the pump and reservoir.



Following is my procedure to fix this problem:



1- Disconnect the hose from the reservoir to the fluid cooler at the cooler to drain the system.

2- Remove the 2 T-24 Torx fasteners that hold on the reservoir. They are not very tight and I was able to easily remove them with a hand held screw driver style driver.

3- Slide the reservoir out of the pump and raise it up high enough to access the 2 O-rings. The hoses will still be attached, but this is fairly easy to get to.

4- Remove the small, 5/8” O-ring and replace. Leave the large O-ring alone, it will not be worn. The blue line in the photo indicates the small O-ring.



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5- Replace the O-ring with a Weatherhead 4629X10 O-ring available from many sources, but I found mine at NAPA. More on that later.

6- Reassemble in the reverse order and fill with ATF+4.

7- Start the truck and turn the steering wheel lock to lock several times to purge the air out of the system.

8- Top off the reservoir with ATF+4 to the mark indicated on the dipstick.

9- Clean up.

10- Celebrate with several adult beverages for just saving yourself at least $130.



Upon inspection, the O-ring exhibited a worn side as you can just see in the photo below in the 2 o’clock position. This is easy to feel rolling it between your fingers. Unfortunately, it looks like this is a design flaw that will cause the ring to wear out again and I expect to have to repeat this chore every 60,000 miles or so from here on out.



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BTW, my dealer does not list this O-ring in his catalog; only the $131 powere steering pump assembly. The nice lady at NAPA did not bother to charge me for the one I installed, but I have seen them for sale for $0. 27 .



As a bonus, this looks to be WAAAAY easier than replacing the whole assembly.



I hope you find this helpful and save a ton of cash. If so, you can buy me a beer when our paths cross.



100 Proof
 
Yours is a good write-up. . succinct and grammatically straightforward. Thanks. My '05 leaks too, and ATF4 is everywhere beneath the reservoir. I'll follow your info and see if my leak is the same. Thanks again.
 
As an FYI, my 2006 2500 power steering actuator started leaking about a month ago. I noticed a small spot of oil on the pavement and on further inspection found it to be coming from the PS unit. Fortunately it was under warranty. Interestingly enough the dealer replaced the entire unit rather than replacing the defective O ring. It was less expensive for him to replace the unit rather than repair the existing one.
 
I just saw my leak today while out changing the fuel filter... . Grrrrrr. Still under warranty for the next four months. I'll be taking it in to get the door seals done, etc, and have them take a look at that and see what they say... . Maybe I'll get a new one under warranty and save these instructions for years down the road.
 
Thanks for the GREAT info. Very nice writeup. I know mine will leak the day after the warranty expires, so I will keep this with my other tidbits for the future.



CD
 
Thanks for the kind words. I think this is just a crappy design and eventually, almost all of them are going to leak from this O-ring.



100 Proof
 
Just to update, I took it in today and had the door seals replaced. Had them check out the leak, yep, coming from the box. The leak was minor, but they had another in stock and replaced it. I figure I'm good for another few years... !
 
WoW these posts are scary IE: the tie rod issues on another post now this one I have all those issues going on at the moment... . my steering box is also leaking very bad I thought it may have been the seal on the shaft but oil is everywhere so I wasn't 100 % sure where it was coming from... . thanks for the write up :)
 
Thanks 100Proof for the Write-Up. This was my problem too. It saved me $280 (What my local dealer wants for a pump for my 05 RAM 3500).

I ran into one Major Set-Back though. The bottom T-25 Torx bolt would not come out becasue the PS pump Pulley was in the way. I thought about removing the pulley in while still mounted in the Truck... This turned out to be a bad idea. Instead, I removed the Driver Side inner fender well, Then Backed the bolt out as far as I could, Put on a small set of needle nose vice grips to keep it from rotating, and with a 90degree cut-off wheel (needed a 4inch) I cut the torx head off and was able to remove the bolt (Removing the hose from the bottom and the 'T' Gave more room for cutting. (I hate using such tools, cutting and grinding near fluid carrying hoses and reserviors) but I was under a time constraint as usual and did not use a hack saw or anything else, couldn't get my large bolt cutters in either.



I then took a body diameter M6X1 bolt and ran a die up the body to make a peice of "all-thread" long enough to tread in from the back side and used the appropriate locking nuts on either end. (no-one had M6 alltread around me on a Saturday).



Thanks 100 Proof for the O-Ring PN, My NAPA had to order 25 of them and they made me buy all 25 of them. . Just over $10. Anyone close to me, Central NC, I have some more if you need them.

Still much better than what my Dealer wanted to gouge me, and Even with all my trail and error and on the fly work probably a quicker fix. Ihave been a TDR member for quite a few years and Find things like these posts VERY helpfull and I appreciate everyone's hard work!
 
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