stricular
Automotive
- Feb 5, 2007
- 2
Hello all,
I have been looking into flushing my power steering for awhile, as preventive maintenance. The procedures call for the technician(in this case, me)to(in a nutshell):
disconnect the return hose from the p/s reservoir and block off its "nub"
jack up then start the car
add fluid to the reservoir while somebody turns the steering wheel...
until clean, fresh, bubble free fluid comes out the return hose
The procedure is the similar for a lot of cars, so this could probably work for many applications:
My idea is to simply put a tee valve(I'm thinking ball type) into the return hose, then all you would have to do is turn the valve to "drain," and let it pump out. No need to disconnect anything. Then turn the valve back to the "thru to the reservoir" position, bleed, and you're done.
What do you think, good idea, bad? It seems like it would make it really easy to do.
Where could one get such a valve? What materials should it be made of? What temps will it need to withstand?
Sorry for the noobish questions,but I am no engineer, just someone who likes to do things right the first time.
I intend to have it permanently installed if that makes any difference. The type of valve that seems like it would be ideal would be a tee valve with three barb fittings. It should be manually operated,to keep the cost down.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.