This is my first winter with my '99 car. Now that it's getting colder I've noticed the steering effort is high right when I start the car up. It goes away after turning the wheel a little to the right and left. I had the same thing on my '96, but it went away. Is this a belt slipping?
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GM sells a "cold weather" fluid for their power steering systems. I've had good luck using it year round in my Formula. Might help reduce the "drag" at startup.Fred
381ci all-forged stroker - 10.8:1 - CNC LT4 heads/intake - CC solid roller - MoTeC engine management - 8 LS1 coils - 58mm TB - 78# injectors - 300-shot dry nitrous - TH400 - Gear Vendor O/D - Strange 12-bolt - 4.11's - AS&M headers - duals - Corbeau seat - AutoMeter gauges - roll bar - Spohn suspension - QA1 shocks - a few other odds 'n ends. 800HP/800lb-ft at the flywheel, on a 300-shot. 11.5 @ 117MPH straight motor
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Yes... I mixed them.
I can't remember the part #. I used to know the owners of the local Pontiac/Cadillac dealer (I sold my 66 GTO to the owner's son, who is now the service manager). He said that they had solved complaints from Caddy owners regarding high steering effort, and suggested I try it.Fred
381ci all-forged stroker - 10.8:1 - CNC LT4 heads/intake - CC solid roller - MoTeC engine management - 8 LS1 coils - 58mm TB - 78# injectors - 300-shot dry nitrous - TH400 - Gear Vendor O/D - Strange 12-bolt - 4.11's - AS&M headers - duals - Corbeau seat - AutoMeter gauges - roll bar - Spohn suspension - QA1 shocks - a few other odds 'n ends. 800HP/800lb-ft at the flywheel, on a 300-shot. 11.5 @ 117MPH straight motor
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