I believe the PT steering assembly has a priority valve that allows steering only when you turn the wheel. When you release the wheel, the steering valve is supposed to center, and therefore, the lift/tilt circuit gets the pressure and volume from the steering and lift pump. If the steering is working, then that part of the steering assembly is OK. Just a small amount of steering will interrupt the lift and tilt. As the steering wheel comes back to center, the priority valve shifts automatically to allow all flow to the lift and tilt. If the steering wheel is sticking anywhere other than center, lift/tilt will not move. If your relief valve is not working, it may stall your engine, or break something or burst a hose. If the relief is relieving all the time, you should not have very much steering or lift/tilt. Yes, you can take the relief valves apart, and clean them, but you really need a gage to adjust the pressure. A test gage in the right place would have already given you the answer. For instance, if the gage is installed at the input of the steering assembly, and you are turning, you would see presssure based on the amount of force required to turn. . If no steering, and the lift/tilt circuit is lifting max load, the gage would show max pressure, and when you stop lifting, no work is being done, the pressure decreases because the fluid now goes back to the steering valve or tank. Your load checks would hold the load.