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Stock steering wheel install without crush can?

Started by timdp, September 13, 2019, 10:12:37 PM

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Chryco Psycho


wanderlustin

#16
Quote from: timdp on September 23, 2019, 08:05:33 PM
Tuff wheel adapter arrived and steering wheel is now on the car. Thanks guys!

@timdp How do you like it?  Any pics to share?  :takepicture:

Claudia

I have contemplated this very thing . . . needing additional room between the steering wheel and myself. 

Has anyone ever done a "chop" on a stock crush can???   :driving:


Burdar

Just throwing this out there...

On an A-body, the steering column outer jacket isn't a solid piece.  It is a metal "mesh".   This is what collapses in an accident.  On an E-body, the outer column jacket is solid and it's the crush can that collapses.  I'm wondering how safe an A-body Tuff wheel adapter is when installed on an E-body.


YellowThumper

#19
Quote from: Claudia on September 25, 2019, 10:10:16 AM
I have contemplated this very thing . . . needing additional room between the steering wheel and myself. 

Has anyone ever done a "chop" on a stock crush can???   :driving:

Interesting that you ask...
I am planning on attending the Fall Fling in VanNuys next month. Hoping to find one I can slice and shorten.
I have the capability of cutting, welding (properly) and finish machining so change becomes unnoticeable.
Life is to be viewed thru the windshield. Not rear view mirror.
You are the only one in charge of your destiny.

Mike.

wanderlustin

Quote from: Burdar on September 25, 2019, 10:26:17 AM
Just throwing this out there...

On an A-body, the steering column outer jacket isn't a solid piece.  It is a metal "mesh".   This is what collapses in an accident.  On an E-body, the outer column jacket is solid and it's the crush can that collapses.  I'm wondering how safe an A-body Tuff wheel adapter is when installed on an E-body.



Excellent point.  The A and B-body cans do not collapse.

dave73

The background on that first picture is like nothing I've ever seen on here. This is an interesting thread ha


timdp

Quote from: wanderlustin on September 25, 2019, 09:16:12 AM
Quote from: timdp on September 23, 2019, 08:05:33 PM
Tuff wheel adapter arrived and steering wheel is now on the car. Thanks guys!

@timdp How do you like it?  Any pics to share?  :takepicture:

The wheel is a little closer to me than it was and the grip on the stock wheel is is is pretty horrible. I'm at the event shown in the pics (Wasteland Weekend; Mad Max in the desert for 6 days) way out in the California desert and the internet is very marginal, so pics may have to wait until I get home

Katfish

I can't really believe what we call the "crush can" on E-bodies is meant to collapse.
The lower column pushes up for this purpose.
Your chest hits that wheel with enough force to collapse that and your toast.


Katfish

I don't doubt they claim that,
Hit that can with a hammer hard enough to collapse it, and I guarantee a blow 1/2 that hard to your chest is not something you walk away from.


timdp

Some pics of the installed wheel and Tuff can. Definitely the most uncomfortable steering wheel I have ever used. Half wrapped it with leather lace at the event and that helped a very little bit. Will be looking a covering options.

Electrical meter has just noted that the MISC fuse is hot with no keys in the car...


wanderlustin

Quote from: Katfish on September 26, 2019, 08:22:47 AM
I can't really believe what we call the "crush can" on E-bodies is meant to collapse.
The lower column pushes up for this purpose.
Your chest hits that wheel with enough force to collapse that and your toast.

@Cuda Cody and I stumbled across this "crushed can" this afternoon! :unbelievable:

CudaMoparRay

Crash can better than a solid piece of metal or nothing but none-the-less I would like to see what the persons chest that hit it looks like  :rubeyes:

Original Mopar engineer crash can tester with a 426 Hellephant on him :rofl:

timdp