Electric steering???

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  • MrBurgundy
    replied
    Originally posted by Panici
    That does sound terrible.

    Driving at the limit you need to feel the tires and suspension loading up through the wheel.
    Depending on tire choice you may have accompanying sound feedback but I wouldn't want to rely on that alone.
    Absolutely.

    My tires make 0 noise, so the steering wheel is my only source of information when it comes to grip in the front and as you said, feeling the suspension load and unload.

    I mean they make hydraulic steering systems that are numb as shit.

    The market today just wants numb everything.

    When you get to the newer M3s and M4s, their electromechanical power steering feels pretty damn good. That just goes to show that EPS can feel good, but it's not going to be coming in your run of the mill, regular people cars and it's going to be expensive.

    Which bring me back to the topic of this thread.. a prius EPS system is not going to feel good. If you wanted a nice feeling EPS, your gonna have to spend a lot of money and modify a lot of shit.

    The hydraulic system is just so simple and too good. If you're gonna bring up the argument that it leaks.... idk what to tell you haha.

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  • Panici
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBurgundy
    In other words, the more resistance you have, for whatever reason, it will command more assistance from the steering to keep that feeling as constant as possible.
    That does sound terrible.

    Driving at the limit you need to feel the tires and suspension loading up through the wheel.
    Depending on tire choice you may have accompanying sound feedback but I wouldn't want to rely on that alone.

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  • MrBurgundy
    replied
    Most of the cars coming through the shop have a shaft to an electric assisted steering rack.

    It's just so numb. It's one feeling no matter the situation- understeering, making a u-turn, it's just all the same.

    In other words, the more resistance you have, for whatever reason, it will command more assistance from the steering to keep that feeling as constant as possible.

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  • Panici
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBurgundy
    Not trying to shit on the EPS, but I've never driven a car that had EPS that offers any kind of tactility that hydraulic steering offers.. I've driven almost every euro car that has EPS

    I can push my e30 to the limit because of how damn well that steering wheels tells me what the front tires are doing.

    I would forfeit the 8hp to keep it the way it came.

    Very curious how this system will feel when it's all done. Waiting for the report
    The cars you drove, were they just electric assist or did they use steer-by-wire?

    Did you find the steering over-assisted and far too light?
    Or just dead in general?

    I've never driven anything with electric assist, just read about it. I too would never sacrifice steering feel in such an analog car.

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  • MrBurgundy
    replied
    Not trying to shit on the EPS, but I've never driven a car that had EPS that offers any kind of tactility that hydraulic steering offers.. I've driven almost every euro car that has EPS

    I can push my e30 to the limit because of how damn well that steering wheels tells me what the front tires are doing.

    I would forfeit the 8hp to keep it the way it came.

    Very curious how this system will feel when it's all done. Waiting for the report

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  • 82eye
    replied
    yeah i thought it was a drive by wire system

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  • DEV0 E30
    replied
    Originally posted by hoveringuy
    I'm working on the Volvo conversion. Playing with the pump here to get maximum dead-head pressure.

    Click image for larger version

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    I was going to tag you. Looking forward to your developments in this area.

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  • Panici
    replied
    Originally posted by 82eye
    you remove the connection to the road and all the driving feedback that sets e30s apart from other mundane cars. it's part of the fun and reason to own one. it serves to remove the driver from the experience.
    I think we need to make the distinction between a "steer-by-wire" system, and simply an electric power assist.

    A steer-by-wire system would remove the mechanical connection between the steering wheel and the rack, much like a drive-by-wire system removes the throttle cable in favour of a potentiometer on the gas pedal and a servo motor on the throttle body.



    I agree that a steer-by-wire system probably feels dead and would go against the ethos of an E30.

    I personally hate anything that removes the driver connection. I WANT to control the throttle butterfly directly with my foot via a cable, even if it's not optimal for performance.


    I believe the systems in this thread are discussing an electric assist (instead of a traditional belt-driven power steering pump). I've never tried one, but I imagine they wouldn't feel too far off from a traditional power steering setup.
    They might even be better if you can dial back the assist for spirited driving taking you closer to a manual rack experience.

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  • iansane
    replied
    Originally posted by 82eye

    you remove the connection to the road and all the driving feedback that sets e30s apart from other mundane cars. it's part of the fun and reason to own one. it serves to remove the driver from the experience.
    I really think this 'everything new/different is terrible' is a short sighted outlook. Have you driven an e30 with any EPS system let alone all the different versions out there? I haven't. Yes I'm sure there are systems that mute this unquantifiable connection to the road you describe but I don't get this blanket condemnation of all electric power steering retrofits. The one that hoveringuy is attempting is still hydraulic. With what amounts to an infinitely adjustable assist. I have 255s on the front of one of my e30s and I drove it for years with no power steering whatsoever. When I finally added it back in did it ruin the experience? Not for me. But it did make parallel parking easier.

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  • jbontke
    replied
    Originally posted by 82eye

    you remove the connection to the road and all the driving feedback that sets e30s apart from other mundane cars. it's part of the fun and reason to own one. it serves to remove the driver from the experience.
    The connection is a 1 to 1, literally. Its a solid shaft from the steering wheel to the steering rack. The motor simply aids in spinning the shaft. This isn't like some of the newer units that completely remove the physical connection. You can also switch off the assist. The kit linked earlier lets you adjust how much assistance you get. BUT I cannot comment on how it would feel as I have not driven an e30 (or another car converted) with electric assist. I would imagine you get all the road feel because the shaft from wheel to rack is still there.

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  • 82eye
    replied
    Originally posted by jbontke

    Why is this aweful? You remove a hydraulic system, fluid leaks and maintenance. And it (marginally) pulls weight off the nose and moves it to the center of the car. The down side I see is taxing the alternator but you can also turn it off.
    you remove the connection to the road and all the driving feedback that sets e30s apart from other mundane cars. it's part of the fun and reason to own one. it serves to remove the driver from the experience.

    Leave a comment:


  • jbontke
    replied
    Originally posted by 82eye
    seems like a great mod for those looking to do something expensive and awful for no reason.

    does this even free up space that would be required for a swap ?
    Why is this aweful? You remove a hydraulic system, fluid leaks and maintenance. And it (marginally) pulls weight off the nose and moves it to the center of the car. The down side I see is taxing the alternator but you can also turn it off.

    Leave a comment:


  • hoveringuy
    replied
    Originally posted by Panici
    Awesome! Build still in progress I presume?
    Yes, it"s multiple things, all precipitated by the dual rear lines for the Mk60 ABS.

    Now that I have all the lines in I'll get the rear subframe back in

    The pump is 12" tall so it will be recessed into the trunk floor so the motor will be below and the res will be above. Thats the idea, anyway.

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  • Panici
    replied
    Originally posted by hoveringuy
    Great idea! ;)

    This is PS supply and return, TWO rear brake lines and a single fuel supply.

    The engine bay will have two 12" flex hoses going to the rack, nothing more.
    Awesome! Build still in progress I presume?

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  • hoveringuy
    replied
    Originally posted by Panici
    Dream setup would be trunk or undercarriage mounted components for an even cleaner looking engine bay.
    Great idea! ;)

    This is PS supply and return, TWO rear brake lines and a single fuel supply.

    The engine bay will have two 12" flex hoses going to the rack, nothing more.

    Click image for larger version

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