anyone have any problems or mishaps with the power steering on their s2k's? or know any real in depth knowledge about them. i feel like i have shaken every tree trying to find the info i need to get mine back working. only piece i have left to trouble shoot is the sensor on the input shaft on the ps rack itself but changing that sensor involves pulling the column and rack back out of the car and taking the rack apart which i have done with my extra rack and its a real ***** to put together so i would like to see if there is somethign else i am overlooking before i do that. my car is right hand drive so that steering rack was hard to get my hands on and the only other in america i found was broken from the get go so its only around for a few parts.
the problems i am having is when everything is plugged up and you start the car the eps light on the dash IS NOT on, until you turn the wheel either direction. just the slightest input of the steering wheel and the rack starts turning left to right all on its own, not lock to lock but maybe a 1/4 turn left and right rapidly and it does not stop until you disconnect the rack or cut the key off. i cant really take it to a dealership to get it hooked up to the factory scan tool that reads the power steering computer because of the right hand drive they dont really wanna fool with something not stock without ripping a new one or blaming the conversion for whats wrong. any help would be awesome or if you own an s2k maybe tell me the order in which the tree plugs on the ps computer are connected in. 2 of the 3 plugs on the computer there are the same shape and will plug in either way. those are the plugs with two heavy gauge wires. one has green and red wire which goes to the rack (output) other one had white/red and black (input) power from the fuse block and relay is white/red, black is the ground. i need to know if the green and red harness is on the rear of the computer towards the firewall or front closer to the shock tower. thanks alot. this post is a bit long but i needed to be thurough.