Have you felt your car tug at the steering-wheel in a way that felt like torque steer? Chances are, more than likely it isn't all torque steer. Ford designed a system to make our lives miserable, and it's called the Pull Drift Compensation. The car tries to detect divots in the road and fails miserably, leading to what feels like torque steer when driving hard when the car doesn't know how to properly compensate for the added horsepower and torque you're throwing at a system that wasn't designed to handle. Disabling this system makes the car much more predictable on the on ramps of highways, turning in, and low traction scenarios. So, now that you have a decent idea on what this system does, let's dive in.
What you'll need to do this:
1.Plug in/connect to the ELM OBD2 adapter you have either purchased, or already have.
2. Open FORScan, and click the plug to connect to your vehicle. (If you don't have a license, get a free extended license from their website, it lasts 2 months).
3. When this screen pops up, click yes to continue.
4. When the screen pops up to make a new vehicle profile, do it, and save the backup to your hard drive.
5. It should now load all the control modules, and what we are going to want to focus on is the service procedures. It is the wrench on the left side, click it, and look for Disable Pull Drift Compensation. Shown below:
6. Press the start button, make sure the steering wheel is straight, and let it run.
7. After that, your Pull Steering compensation has been disabled. You can later re-enable it by enabling it by hitting enable, and then resetting it (both will tell you to make sure the steering wheel is straight, so do that before you run the service program).
8. After that, hit the home page/vehicle information, and disconnect FORScan from the vehicle.
What you'll need to do this:
- A laptop with FORScan
- An OBD2 ELM Cable or a bluetooth ELM cable
1.Plug in/connect to the ELM OBD2 adapter you have either purchased, or already have.
2. Open FORScan, and click the plug to connect to your vehicle. (If you don't have a license, get a free extended license from their website, it lasts 2 months).
3. When this screen pops up, click yes to continue.

4. When the screen pops up to make a new vehicle profile, do it, and save the backup to your hard drive.
5. It should now load all the control modules, and what we are going to want to focus on is the service procedures. It is the wrench on the left side, click it, and look for Disable Pull Drift Compensation. Shown below:

6. Press the start button, make sure the steering wheel is straight, and let it run.
7. After that, your Pull Steering compensation has been disabled. You can later re-enable it by enabling it by hitting enable, and then resetting it (both will tell you to make sure the steering wheel is straight, so do that before you run the service program).
8. After that, hit the home page/vehicle information, and disconnect FORScan from the vehicle.