The DON said:Has anybody done this before? Is it even possible?
Exactly! I should have said 90 pund weakling. TheDon: the young lady bellow has no trouble flogging a manual NSX around!NSXGirl4j said:
Hey KGP, who says that a girl can't drive with the manual steering?
I have to respectfully disagree. The NSX's power steering is one hell of a piece of engineering that tremendously increases the joy of driving the car. I currently have both a 1992 manual coupe and 1997 T. I always thought the steering effort on the coupe is a little too excessive in low speed. I found myself straining parallel parking. My T is perfect in low speed, and above 30mph, the power steering feels just as precise as the coupe's manual steering with same effort and road feedback. In fact, one of the biggest reason why I decided to keep the T instead of the coupe is the T's steering. It simply offers best of both world. In today's emphasis in ergonomics, there is no reason to keep the He-man's idiosyncracy such as heavy controls and steering. Honda went extra steps to design such a wonderful device to make the car more user friendly. It is a good thing.NSXGirl4j said:If you have ever driven a NSX with power steering, you wouldn't want to change yours. There really is no reason to.
Hey KGP, who says that a girl can't drive with the manual steering?
nsxparts.com said:This goes back to the old tire patch thread...
DanO said:Heart Racing did it to their NSX race car at Pete Halsmer's request.
The DON said:Has anybody done this before? Is it even possible?
Volume 9 of the "VTEC Sports" Magazine, the same folks who publish the Hyper Rev Magazine has an article about retrofitting the power steering system to a non power steered car.
The particular car in question is a NA1 version of the NSX (manual) to which a power steering system of an automatic is retrofitted.
From what the article states there are several components that need to be swapped or added on. Fortunately all NSX's even the manual ones have the right hooks to have a Power Steering system retrofitted.
The cost that has been quoted in the article is about: 520,000 yen or about $4,000, that's not really that cheap .
They don't really quote part numbers but they do quote the name of the parts.
Ken
I know this is an old thread, but bumping if anybody has this issue or knows what is all needed. I have searched quite a bit.
Yeah, i know this thread is a little old, but i thought I might ad my .02 (after taxes only worth .013 of course)
I did a manual--> power steering conversion on my Toyota Landcruiser. NOt the same vehicle, but principle is similar. BASIC power steering is extremely, well, basic. If you are not shooting for a nifty speed sensing unit, but just easier turning in the parking lot, then it is elbow grease intensive, but pretty simple (2-3 banana job).. you would need a PS pump, with the appropriate bracket...that would be by far the most difficult thing to get if your engine does not have the appropriate holes pre-drilled...who has the cajones to start drilling an NSX block? Let's assume the holes are there, and you buy a stock PS pump, and find a junkyard bracket, custom fab the PS lines (total cost about $30-40). I had a guy manufacture a PS pump bracket, cost me $89 and bolts to my engine mount bolts, so i didn't have to drill my block.
The PS box itself would bolt up to the stock location, possibly with the stock PS box bracket, OR with a custum one made at a machine or welding shop ($200+/-). This would give you the basic PS setup that most cars have, minus the electronix wizardry necessary for speed sensing, etc..