peter1 wrote:
Torque steer? Is it normal? I've got it a bit too.
The term torque steer is commonly misused I find. Torque steer, from what I understand is due to unequal length driveshafts on a FWD (like Mini). Such that under heavy torque one bends (the longer one due to more leverage?) causing the car to pull to one side. Of course generally speaking a Mini does not have nearly enough grunt to do this.
I once thought I had "torque steer" and looked it up on wikipedia out of interest, I didn't have it. My car would move towards the centre of the road under acceleration and move back when you backed off. It turns out I had a loose bolt on the steering arm with attachs to the brake casuing the car to behace in this fashion.

As Doc says check all that stuff and maybe take the car to a steering/suspension place to help you suss it out. Or jack the car up and see if you can move the wheel left and right, it should be solid.
<edit> went on wikipedia....
Quote:
When the driveshafts have different length and excessive torque is applied, the longer half shaft flexes more than the shorter one, thus causing one wheel to momentarily spin more slowly than the other, resulting in a steering effect. So the equal length of the driveshafts reduce the torque steer effect.
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1964 Morris 850, 1330 Supercharged - 81.8hp atws.
1975 Leyland Mini S 1100S powered - Nice and reliable.
1977 Leyland Mini LS - Project LS-T
