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Steering system seals and gaskets are what keep power steering fluid where it belongs — pressurized and circulating — rather than coating your driveway or starving your pump. This collection covers the full range of sealing components for both rack-and-pinion and recirculating ball steering systems: pump seal kits, shaft seals, gear seal kits, sector and pitman shaft seals, rack seals, and O-ring and hose seal rings. Most seals degrade from heat cycling, age, and fluid contamination rather than mileage alone, though high-mileage vehicles (100,000+ miles) are significantly more prone to leaks. When shopping, confirm whether your application uses a recirculating ball gear or rack-and-pinion — the seal kits are not interchangeable. For pump seal kits, verify the pump manufacturer or casting number, not just the vehicle year/make/model. OEM-spec rubber compound matters here: PTFE or Viton-based seals handle power steering fluid chemistry better than generic rubber and are worth the modest price difference on older vehicles prone to repeat leaks.
Signs you need replacement
- Power steering fluid pooling under the front of the vehicle — A reddish or amber puddle near the front axle centerline points to a pump shaft seal, gear seal, or rack seal failure. Even a slow seep accelerates once the sealing lip is compromised.
- Whining or groaning from the pump that worsens with turns — Low fluid from a leaking seal starves the pump of lubrication. If the reservoir is consistently low with no external puddle, suspect an internal pump seal or valve seal allowing fluid bypass.
- Steering effort that increases gradually over weeks — As seals wear, internal pressure bleeds past them and system assist drops. This is distinct from sudden loss and often means a gear seal kit or rack seal is the culprit.
- Visible wetness or staining around the steering gear housing or rack boots — Oily residue around the pitman shaft, sector shaft, or rack boot end caps is a direct indicator of shaft seal failure. Boots alone won't contain fluid — the seal behind them needs replacement.
- Fluid weeping from pump pressure hose fittings or line connections — If tightening the fitting doesn't stop the leak, the copper or rubber seal ring at the connection is the failure point, not the hose itself.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should power steering pump and gear seals be replaced? There's no fixed interval — seals are replaced on condition, not schedule. In practice, most failures occur between 80,000 and 150,000 miles, or after 15+ years on vehicles where the fluid was never flushed. Contaminated or oxidized fluid accelerates seal degradation significantly, so a fluid flush every 50,000 miles extends seal life.
- Are aftermarket seal kits as reliable as OEM for rack-and-pinion or steering gear rebuilds? Quality varies widely. Reputable brands like Edelmann, SKF, and National use OEM-equivalent rubber compounds that hold up to power steering fluid. Avoid unbranded kits with no material specifications listed — the rubber formulation matters more than most other specs here, particularly on vehicles that run synthetic or Dexron-compatible PS fluid.
- If I'm replacing a steering gear or rack seal kit, what else should I do at the same time? Replace the power steering fluid completely — old fluid is often what degraded the seals in the first place. On rack-and-pinion jobs, inspect the tie rod ends and rack boots while the unit is accessible. On recirculating ball gear rebuilds, replace the complete seal kit rather than individual seals; partial seal replacement on a worn gear rarely holds long-term.















































