Thomas, I didn't read the whole message! I've added power steering using a late model steering box. You don't have to change the column, not if you're willing to cut the shaft from the original steering box and grind it to mount an adapter. The tricky part is making sure you cut it the right length! Of course you can cut it long, then measure what you need to remove. Making 2-3 cuts is better than getting it to short! Mounting the box can be tricky too. You don't need the adapter that AMC used, but you will need to make a spacer and drill a couple 3/8" holes in your front chassis rails. The only thing you really need to be concerned about is that the pitman arm on the new box is the same length as the old one and the taper on the end that goes into the steering drag link is the same. The taper changed around 67 (I'm not exactly sure when it changed). You may have to weld the drag link and buy a taper boring tool to make it work right. If you have the setup from a 65-66 Classic or Ambassador you can just change the steering column and all, everything will bolt right into the 63-64 big car. The original 63-64 power steering used a hydraulic cylinder that doubled as the drag link. It was anchored to the passenger side of the car, and the standard steering box pushed against a valve on the other end, activating power assist. Those are leak prone now, and the dust seals are hard to find. The inner seals are simple o-rings though, so it's not to hard to rebuild, and you can fabricate some dust seals or may be able to modify early 60s Ford parts to work (they used a similar setup-- may be same manufacturer). -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AMC.html (free download available!) _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list