Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

1st up - that shouldn't happen. If there is a HICAS fault (like speed sensor fail, or steering angle sensor fail) then the rest of the power steering should continue to work. It shouldn't become heavy.

2ndly, if you just rip everything out (including and especially the HICAS computer in the boot) then the steering will become heavy.

3rdly, you don't actually need a lock bar in an R32, because in the event of a fault, the HICAS hydraulics are designed to lock the rear rack in the centre position anyway. So this gives us the #1 trick to disabling HICAS (in an R32), which is to pull the smaller of the two loom plugs out of the HICAS computer. That will disable it without wrecking anything, and no light on the dash either.

I credit myself with discovering this trick, in about 1999. I drove my R32 until 2012 with the HICAS in this condition. Only reason I changed it is because I finally got jack of carrying all the extra shit and deleted HICAS entirely, right down to swapping out the rear subframe with a non-HICAS one. But the HICAS computer is still there, still connected with the larger plug only. Small plug hanging.

Edited by GTSBoy

I locked it to save weight and complexity under the rear and because i could now use the steel Hicas lines as larger fuel feed lines and the old fuel feed lines as the fuel return lines.

Im very old school about the R32 GTR's, i loved Hicas, having a loose rear end it behaved like a RWD on dirt on tar and didnt bother me at high speed, i grew up Rally driving on a club level and i felt natural to feel the rear move around at speed and correct.

The change point for me was once when testing the car, i did a 4WD hard launch and threw it around while the 4WD Gauge was up and got her crab walking side to side, that time when hicas was correcting things it was virtually uncontrollable, the car was not doing what i wanted it to to correct things, from that point i saw the weak side of it and decided to remove it.

1st up - that shouldn't happen. If there is a HICAS fault (like speed sensor fail, or steering angle sensor fail) then the rest of the power steering should continue to work. It shouldn't become heavy.

On R32's the power steering does go heavy when the speedo fails. I've known a few people that have had speedo cables fail and the power steering basically fails

On R32's the power steering does go heavy when the speedo fails. I've known a few people that have had speedo cables fail and the power steering basically fails

Yep thats exactly what happened.. as soon as the speedo cable failed the steering got heavy and at the same time the hicas light would come on..

On R32's the power steering does go heavy when the speedo fails. I've known a few people that have had speedo cables fail and the power steering basically fails

Interesting. Mine didn't. Wasn't a broken speedo cable in my case but I did have no valid speed signal coming from the speedo head for a short while (whilst fiddling with wiring). But, of course, my HICAS computer was not fully wired at that time (per previous post), so maybe that's the difference.

Yeah probably depends how the thing is wired. If you had yours unplugged (HICAS steering locked as you said) the pump/rack was probably on full. Cant remember if the rack or pump controls the flow, more then likely the rack like 33's. I dunno lol

Yep, goes heavy.

your attachment is spot on. If i turned the car off it would reset and the steering would feel fine for around a minute of driving before the hicas light would come back on and the steering went heavy again. Once i fixed the speedo cable it worked fine.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • A locally delivered Infiniti have remote start installed but don't come with the remote start key. You need a new remote start key and they just need it programed. And this is different to making/programing a new key that just starts the car.  
    • Cheers, and cheers for sharing so much of the build and also sharing the glimpse of what turns out to bring a lot of us poor decision makers together haha.  I do recommend learning more about how to manage it, if not considering getting a  formal diagnosis.  The discussion with the psychiatrist I got my diagnosis through was quite eye opening, things I'd not even considered to be ADHD related and hadn't mentioned were things she asked about out of the blue and were common themes with people with my flavour of ADHD.   It's not a label for people who are hyperactive and ill-attentive, there's more to it than that and some of it can be much more challenging or damaging - though there are of course two sides to the thing, and a lot of the stuff we have to go through and work on to live with it make us effectively "better" at other things as well. Aside from the fact that there is some argument I could have a bit of ASD seasoning in there (came up during the diagnosis, and neurodiverse things seem to not stay as a cookie cut) I suspect you need to learn more about ADHD if you are puzzled about how hyperfocus could possibly apply.  I *do* personally use "superpower" with quotes deliberately, but it's 100% an ADHD thing due to the exact reason that lack of focus is also an ADHD thing... Loosely speaking the inattentive side of ADHD isn't the inability to focus, it's the inability to control where the focus goes.  Not being able to sleep because brain is more interested in thinking about a stupid thing I said to a girl I liked 30 years ago, not being able to focus on work because my brain is more keen on putting together the torque management strategy we're going to try out with a drag car next weekend, not being able to focus on a conversation with someone I WANT to listen to and respect because there is a flickering light in my peripheral vision.    If I could just stop work and build the torque management setup right there and then I'd not hear anything else until it was done.  
    • Maybe you should do some more reading.  Google positive effects of ADHD and you'll get your answers.  One of my personal downsides of ADHD has been talking before I think.   Maybe you have it too?
    • Excuse me for butting in....but which part of ADHD can be considered a superpower? I would have though it far more likely that some ASD comorbidity is more likely to be contributing to an ability to hyperfocus on something. ADHD being aimed somewhat in the other direction. My shed looks like your shed. My whiteboard list of unfinished projects has entries going back 15 years. I know what you're talking about - I just struggle to connect ADHD to the results being discussed.
    • Thanks for reaching out!  It's a blessing and a curse at the same time.  I'm undiagnosed but it doesn't take a rocket scientist to see it in me... I have more half started projects laying around my house, shed, garden, etc taking up space and money, destroying aesthetics than if I added up all of my mates projects together. But, ADHD gives me the ability to hyper focus on things that no mere mortal could even  comprehend.  A recent pool build is an example of that....  I dont know anyone else that would be dumb enough and focused enough to take on then complete something of that magnitude. I call ADHD a superpower but it can equally be completely destructive if not controlled and focusedon the right places. Addiction is a major concern to ADHD people and thankfully my addictions have been no worse than projects, XBOX, chocolate and being an arsehole! It's often hereditary and my 13 year old son is currently learning how to drive it at the moment. Keep lurking! If i can finally finish this bloody thing at some point it will be a win for all of us ADHD'ers! 🤪
×
×
  • Create New...