I used a sprite rack and pinion + TR4 control arms. It's all a bolt in so
it can be easily converted back to stock. The tie rods for the sprite rack
need to be cut down and re-threaded for the TR rod ends( ie, right and left
dies). I ended up using a TR-4 steering column assembly (and motolita
steering wheel). All of this was done in '94 and to be honest, the car has
seen little use since, about 150 miles (started racing in '95).
Before you do the conversion, you should spruce up on camber gain and bump
steer to be sure what you end up with is stable.
Good luck,
Chip
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From: R. John Lye[SMTP:rjl6n@virginia.edu]
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 1998 6:25 AM
To: Alexander Joseph H; 'Angelo Graham'; 'Amici Triumphi'
Subject: RE: TR3A rack and pinion conversion.
At 08:48 AM 4/16/98 -0500, Alexander Joseph H wrote:
>FOT,
>
>Any sage words of advice or caveats to Angelo Graham, from Canada, who is
>exploring the R & P conversion on his TR3A?
Chip Bond did it on his TR-3, but he's a bit behind on his e-mail
right now. The really hard part is keeping the control head
looking stock and having the horn and turn signals work (assuming
that this is a street car, and you want it to look stock). Bob
Schaller's book describes his solution to that problem. I've been
trying to think of a more elegant solution but haven't managed to
do so yet.
John Lye
rjl6n@Virginia.edu
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