I did it once before, its not that hard on a Ford rack at least. The seal kit is several lip seals, some O rings, and some of those Teflon plastic sealing rings. I also bought boots and new inner tie rods so all-in I'll be around 50 bucks into this not counting the tools. The special tools are all for relatively obvious reasons. Odd size lock nuts, the thing that will couple the input shaft to a torque wrench for setting the preload, a puller for getting the valve assembly out of the housing. Tool set cost me about 80 bucks, so between the tools and parts I'm not saving anything other than the chance of getting a sloppy but not-leaky rack.Mike W. wrote: Feb 02, 2022 1:14 AM
I know they may all be different, but how bad a job is doing R and P seals? My Datsun is leaking enough I've got a diaper under it so as not to leave too much on the pavement, Pick and Pull had a couple of weepers the last I looked, far better than mine, but not dry. Debating on so called rebuilt for about 225 or a kit which would be 75 with boots. Mines reasonably tight, but it leaks. A lot.
The rack I rebuilt myself was a grossly overpriced thing that was supposed to be the most awesome rack available. Took forever to get it, then for unrelated reasons it took a while to get it installed. Put it in and it leaked horribly right away. Drove great, but they never washed it out or something. The garbage in the rack contaminated the whole system, turned the clear fluid in my new pump and lines into this dark grey glittery mess. I'm just assuming thats why the seals in the rack failed too. They wouldn't do anything for me since it was out of warranty on time reasons, so I re-sealed it myself. In the meantime I'd gotten an exchange on the prior lousy reman rack and was driving on that. I was actually on my way to get it aligned when I wrecked the car. Not related to the alignment at all, just me being a dipshit. That rack is still sitting on the floor, un-tested.