T350 PAS - Standard or Option?
T350 PAS - Standard or Option?
Author
Discussion

Craig!

Original Poster:

349 posts

220 months

Tuesday 20th September 2011
quotequote all
Sorry, third thread of the night but Google is just bringing up a load of parts sites when searching... did the T350 have a factory fit PAS as standard or was it like the Griff / Chims where it was an option?

JulianHJ

8,858 posts

285 months

Tuesday 20th September 2011
quotequote all
Standard across the T-cars AFAIK.

shep1001

4,619 posts

212 months

Tuesday 20th September 2011
quotequote all
Std on all the T-cars. Electric pump sytems on the Tamora, T350 & Sags. Early Tuscans were not electric pump systems.

Shep

Craig!

Original Poster:

349 posts

220 months

Tuesday 20th September 2011
quotequote all
How effective is the system? The T350 I drove at the weekend didn't feel like it had PAS it felt like my Exige did :/ whats the best way to check the system is working?

ben_ek

56 posts

233 months

Tuesday 20th September 2011
quotequote all
you would definitely know if it wasn't working, you'd barely be able to turn the wheel. note the weight of the steering is affected by the damper setup, so this may be why it was heavy.

shep1001

4,619 posts

212 months

Tuesday 20th September 2011
quotequote all
Craig! said:
How effective is the system? The T350 I drove at the weekend didn't feel like it had PAS it felt like my Exige did :/ whats the best way to check the system is working?
You can hear the pump running/fluid moving when you turn the steering wheel

Shep

crimbo

1,308 posts

251 months

Tuesday 20th September 2011
quotequote all
Craig! said:
How effective is the system? The T350 I drove at the weekend didn't feel like it had PAS it felt like my Exige did :/ whats the best way to check the system is working?
It has it but it's not over assisted, if it didnt you would struggle to move the wheel when the car is not moving

Craig!

Original Poster:

349 posts

220 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
Owned a few non-PAS cars and this certainly felt like one, guessing fuse would be first port of call on a Trevor?

shep1001

4,619 posts

212 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
Craig! said:
Owned a few non-PAS cars and this certainly felt like one, guessing fuse would be first port of call on a Trevor?
check 80A midi fuse & holder in battery box (wheel off job) 7.5a blade fuse on the main fuse board (#36 6th up from the bottom) 45A relay under the hood by the oil tank (its inside the light grey holder). I guess for completeness check the connection to the PS pump, so follow the loom back from the relay.

Shep

Craig!

Original Poster:

349 posts

220 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
For a quick 'is it the pump' test would it be OK just sending a direct 12v source to it?

TVRinBFG

1,459 posts

307 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
Craig! - If the PAS wasn't working you'd have difficulty getting the car out the garage/parking space.

Craig!

Original Poster:

349 posts

220 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
I did, but figured it was because it was a 'raw' car and had 18" wheels and no-PAS. Lotus only had 16" front wheels so wasn't too bad, but it was a case of if the wheels were not rolling you weren't able to turn it without great force.

BCA

8,651 posts

280 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
Craig! - With the car on but stationary, turn the wheel with one hand. Then turn the car off and try turning the wheel with one hand.

hang on, will get a vid, need to try something anyway - give me ten mins or so.

Targarama

14,717 posts

306 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
BCA said:
Craig! - With the car on but stationary, turn the wheel with one hand. Then turn the car off and try turning the wheel with one hand.

hang on, will get a vid, need to try something anyway - give me ten mins or so.
You don't even need the engine running. Not nice for the joints to turn the steering while not rolling though.

BCA

8,651 posts

280 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
http://s1099.photobucket.com/albums/g386/CerberaBC...

Hopefully that will work. Not the best quality and a pretty poor vid, but you get the idea. If you listen carefully, you can hear the 'whine' of the PAS as I turn it over the cold engine noise. hehe I am a righty before anyone comments, and the 'oof' was probably a bit of an exaggeration, but there is a marked difference.

FWIW - the difference between a non-PAS 730kilo mid engined car and a T350c with PAS is little. My old 'Ring Smart has non-PAS and with no weight up front, even with elise width tyres, its easier to turn than the T350 still. smile

Edited by BCA on Wednesday 21st September 13:14

BCA

8,651 posts

280 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
Targarama said:
You don't even need the engine running. Not nice for the joints to turn the steering while not rolling though.
Had to start it anyway, wanted to try something with the keys.




I also just like hearing it purr... cloud9

Craig!

Original Poster:

349 posts

220 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
Well the car I saw 100% DID NOT turn like that, it was like the latter again like my Exige (non-PAS) was.

BCA

8,651 posts

280 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
Craig! said:
Well the car I saw 100% DID NOT turn like that, it was like the latter again like my Exige (non-PAS) was.
I agree then, there is a problem. smile

I am actually very impressed with how nicely the T350 steers. After looking underneath, it appears we have a factory bumpsteer mod too - maybe a later car thing? It should be easy to turn, but not overly-assisted like most stuff, its a good weight IMHO.

Craig!

Original Poster:

349 posts

220 months

Wednesday 21st September 2011
quotequote all
Yeh, I loved the T350's feel however wasn't convinced on the steering that's when I started digging around to see of PAS was an option or not. I'm a fan of raw cars, but 18" wheels and no-PAS goes from raw to just impractical.