You need to place the car on the floor, start it, and turn the steering wheel
side to side to load the system and make the valves switch. I did the same
thing a few years back with my wife's Jag after a rack replacement. I filled
it and turned the wheels with the car up in the air and took it for a test
drive. It was moaning before I went a block. I took it back to the house and
filled up the with the car on the ground and turning the wheels and it worked
like a champ.
Sam
On Apr 14, 2012, at 1:00 PM, triumphs-request at autox.team.net wrote:
>
>
> Have a spot of trouble with the Stag. All the power-steering fluid leaked
out. With driving season coming, I finally got out to the shop to address
this.
>
> Cleaned up the area down below hoping to be able spot the source of the
leak.
>
> Started to pour fresh fluid into the reservoir (pump has Delco guts). It
filled right up and won't take any more. I cranked the engine over for a bit,
and I can see the pulley going around. The fluid level does not go down at
all.
>
>
> Do I have to actually run the engine to get the fluid in?
>
> Phil Ethier West Side Saint Paul Minnesota USA
> 1973 Triumph Stag LE22439UBW "uncle jack", Sapphire Blue
> 2004 Suburban 8.1, Sport Red, the only automatic of the bunch
> 2005 Lotus Elise, Bordeaux Red Pearl
> 2007 Saturn Ion 3 2.4, Berry Red
> pethier [at] comcast [dot] net
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/pethier
> http://www.triumphtransamerica.org.uk
> http://www.mnautox.com
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