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DaveT

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Posts posted by DaveT

  1. Get a similar thickness piece of wire, splice on to get length, add a 1/4"  connector.  Splice and use heat shrink on the joint.  I clean the Flux off, then put a little rtv on the area, slide the shrink over it.  Shrink it, the rtv will set and make it more water tight than just dry.

    If you have a scrap / spare harness,  any of the connectors that use the 1/4" contacts will work.   You can make a release tool from one of the metal strips.on the side of windshield wiper refill blades.

  2. If the mickey mouse gasket is from a dealer, it should be viton, or some other beetle than typical oring material.  Don't mess with that.  If there is a joint in the casting that it crosses, and there is a dip or something not smooth, a tiny dot of rtv is ok .  The last time I got the cam orings from a dealer, they were similar better than typical oring material also.  They don't get hard.

  3. Back when you could only get them from Subaru,  for $90 each, I made replaceable bearing tensioners.  The originals, the bearing was welded to the stud / spacer .  So now I just replace  the bearings with high quality contact seal bearings.  About $8 each back then.  I can look up the sizes later.

  4. If you don't have coolant dissappearing, I wouldn't touch the headgaskets.   They can develop leaks from coolant to the outside.   But you will have slow coolant loss for a long time before you have to deal with it, as long as you check the level and air in the upper hose to prevent running it when low.

    The idler bearings are usually good for about 50k miles, just like the belts.

    With the new seals - include the o rings behind the small pieces that the cam shaft seals press into.  The shaft seal on the oil pump.   

    After much debating and reading what others were doing re timing belt covers, I  stopped using them.  Years ago.  I have had fewer problems since.  One time, I even could hear the beginning of an idler bearing failure before it got bad enough to snap the belt.

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  5. Possibly, one of the timing pulleys was off a small amount, 1 notch on a belt.  Carefully line up the marks, and double check that they are where they are supposed to be.   The center of the 3 ||| on the flywheel lined up to the arrow in the casting.  The little hole in each cam pulley - one will be straight up, the other straight down.  There is a notch in the back cover, at the top, to line up with.  Rotate the crank one revolution, the up and down holes should be swapped, and the one at the top should be right on it's mark.

  6. Long blinks are the 10s  short are the 1s.  Those sound like normal codes.  Have to look them up to see what they are.  Normal as in real, may or may not be why it won't start.  Iirc, 34 is the egr solenoid,  that won't keep it from starting. 

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