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Date:         Fri, 23 Mar 2001 23:40:22 EST
Reply-To:     JKrevnov@AOL.COM
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Rico Sapolich <JKrevnov@AOL.COM>
Subject:      Re: purpose of shear bolts
Comments: To: CTONLINE@webtv.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"

OK. Now anyone who gives a damn about the purpose of shear bolts, get out your Bentley or take a look under your dash at the steering column. Don't worry, you don't have to climb under the van because everything you have to see is above floor level. Near floor level, coming up through the steering column boot is the lower column. It is a cranked shaft with a two hole flange on its end. The flange has 2 pins facing downward permanently fixed to it. The upper column has a two hole flange on its bottom end which mates to the lower column flange. This is a slip joint which appears to be designed to come apart during a frontal collision. If others had the same experience as I did the first time I removed the shear bolts, the steering column slipped out of the lower column bracket spring clip and separated at this slip fitting.

I think Terry is right in saying that the steering column tube mounting bolts (i.e., the shear bolts) shearing will do you no good in a headon. In fact it seems to me that these bolts are designed to do the exact opposite: they are supposed to keep the steering column tube in its place. If the floor is coming up at you, the flanged joint comes apart. If you go hard against the steering wheel the plastic spacer at the top of the steering column crushes to absorb the energy, the steering column slides in the steering column tube and the slip joint at the bottom, again, comes apart. So, as Mark said, they are to prevent tampering. If the steering column tube slips it takes the steering column inside of it along for the ride and the flanged slip joint comes apart. That's not something you want to happen when all you wanted to do was run down to the package store for a six pack.

Rich


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