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Electric Power Steering (2 Series)

cosbySweater

300+ Member
300+ Club
Joined
Jul 16, 2009
Location
Monterey/Falun
So alot of people have been bugging me about my electric power steering so i thought i would do a little write up on how you can have electric power steering on a Brickspeed/Turbobricks budget. So first you are going to have to get a pump assembly and some other misc parts from a 2nd generation Mr2 w20 (1989-1999) every thing you need is located in the trunk of the car (aka the front of it lol). So heres is the parts list and this is the stuff i grabbed:
Pump
Reservoir
All power steering related lines (not necessary but makes it easier, but you HAVE TO GRAB THE PRESSURE LINE!)
and you can also grab the wiring harness and related sensor if you want. (not necessary).
Denso or Bosch 100amp alternator from a 940(it does put a high load on the system so you wanna get a higher output then the stock alternator).

Heres some pictures of the pump and how its mounted in my car.

I have mounted the pump on the battery tray, you have to cut a small corner out of it if you want to mount it there. i was going to mount it elsewhere but this is the cheapest way i think. As you can see the only wires i have hooked up is power and ground. I am running the switch on the ground side of the circuit and am using a volvo switch, the power side is run to my jumper terminal, and i have a 40 amp maxi fuse in a holder, i imaging you could run a wire to the stock fuse block but this works fine.

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So heres where you need to do some cutting and welding. I took the stock volvo pressure side power steering line and hacked it off as close as i could to the flare on the pressure side of the volvo pump. On the Mr2 pressure line the line goes from hard at the pump to a soft line that goes into the steering rack. I Cut the mr2 hardline section as close to the Hardline/soft line union as possible. Basically with both of these cut off you can see where you wanna make your cuts and where it needs to be welded. You could also get a custom line made but this was done with budget in mind. Once you have your lines trimmed you can weld them or have them welded for you. It is so little that needs to be welded i got it done for free.

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Here you can see the way i mounted the fluid reservoir, its pretty ghetto but it works, you could use the stock 240 reservoir but i just used this one. The lines actually fit perfect going to the steering rack you just need to do a little trimming.

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So heres the steering in action!

http://youtu.be/-bg36E34NQ4

So all in all if you do the swap i did and relocate the battery to the trunk with a BMW battery cable and a autozone battery tray this swap can be done for a little under 100 bucks and its completely worth it. Power steering on demand! The way it should be!
 
good stuff... thanks... i've been keeping my eyes open at the JY for a mkII to snag the PS stuff from for my s10... but nothing yet :(

but as a past owner of 4 mkI mr2s i'm going to correct you in one small thing... the "front trunk" is called the frunk... it still has a back trunk behind the engine... so you gota be specific here ;-)...
 
can you find more info on the pipe to pipe connector?...

don't know what the max pressure is on the electric pump... but standard pumps can reach up to 1500psi... so whatever you use be careful... and consider spending the $30 or so for a properly crimped fitting at your hydraulic hose shop
 
any idea how it works when originally installed on the MR2?

Did it run full time, run only when steering wheel turned or what?
 
yup sensor that kicks it on when you start turning the wheel... pretty much the same as all the other electric PS cars out there... no additional straign on the engine to power it if you didn't need it

recall someone on here tossed a switch on his so he could turn it on even if the car wasn't... or could cut it off for drag racing or whatever...
 
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