I will only adjust the eccentric ring with the front wheels off the ground, as it's the only way you can assess any stiction in the steering with any real sensitivity, so what you're suggesting sounds good. Turn the steering wheel both ways repeatedly to get a feel for what it's doing (with the ignition off). Slightly anticlockwise, slightly clockwise, all the way anticlockwise, all the way clockwise, rock it anticlockwise/clockwise to feel for free play.
The most telling indicator of sticky steering is a stiction that resists you turning the steering wheel from rest (with the road wheels still in the air). It'll require a relatively high amount of torque to get it to begin turning, but then only requires a minimal amount of torque to continue turning it. It sounds as though you have a looseness to your steering though, so you'll be concentrating on the other end of the scale - i.e. free play when rapidly (approx 1 left-right sequence per second) jiggling the steering wheel.
I spend 2-3 minutes assessing the steering wheel in this way before making any adjustments to the eccentric ring, and getting yourself in tune with what you're feeling here is key, because you need to reassess it while you continue making your eccentric ring adjustments so that you know when it feels right. Of course, you can take it for a test drive and adjust the ring again afterwards if need be, but it's better if you can nail it in one hit with an accurate assessment rather than a hit/miss guessing game with no science behind it!
The most telling indicator of sticky steering is a stiction that resists you turning the steering wheel from rest (with the road wheels still in the air). It'll require a relatively high amount of torque to get it to begin turning, but then only requires a minimal amount of torque to continue turning it. It sounds as though you have a looseness to your steering though, so you'll be concentrating on the other end of the scale - i.e. free play when rapidly (approx 1 left-right sequence per second) jiggling the steering wheel.
I spend 2-3 minutes assessing the steering wheel in this way before making any adjustments to the eccentric ring, and getting yourself in tune with what you're feeling here is key, because you need to reassess it while you continue making your eccentric ring adjustments so that you know when it feels right. Of course, you can take it for a test drive and adjust the ring again afterwards if need be, but it's better if you can nail it in one hit with an accurate assessment rather than a hit/miss guessing game with no science behind it!
