I too have the steering column looseness in the lower bearing of my '97. Had it since about 50k miles; and it's very annoying. After reading about the bushing several years ago; I had a serious reservation about this repair.
Most journal type bearings use a softer material like babbit, bronze or brass for the stationary surface; with a steel, even a hardened steel, rotating shaft. Engines, air compresser and turbine shafts are pressure feed oil for lubrication; yet in many cases the shafts will show scoring and severe wear where the babbit is hardly worn.
It the case of the lower steering column for our Dodges, the original bearing has a wearing surface fixed to the outer column and another wearing surface fixed to the inner shaft. The wear takes place between these 2 surfaces as we all well know.
Using the nylon bushing fix posted recently makes the shaft itself one of the wearing surfaces. Hence the situation mentioned above. My concern is wearing of the inner shaft (with a possible loss of steering in an extreme case) and the inability or difficulty in checking exactly how much wear is taking place on the inner shaft.
Any body measure the thickness of the inner shaft?? Is the inner shaft hollow or a solid shaft??
Any comments?
Most journal type bearings use a softer material like babbit, bronze or brass for the stationary surface; with a steel, even a hardened steel, rotating shaft. Engines, air compresser and turbine shafts are pressure feed oil for lubrication; yet in many cases the shafts will show scoring and severe wear where the babbit is hardly worn.
It the case of the lower steering column for our Dodges, the original bearing has a wearing surface fixed to the outer column and another wearing surface fixed to the inner shaft. The wear takes place between these 2 surfaces as we all well know.
Using the nylon bushing fix posted recently makes the shaft itself one of the wearing surfaces. Hence the situation mentioned above. My concern is wearing of the inner shaft (with a possible loss of steering in an extreme case) and the inability or difficulty in checking exactly how much wear is taking place on the inner shaft.
Any body measure the thickness of the inner shaft?? Is the inner shaft hollow or a solid shaft??
Any comments?