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Everything posted by DaveT
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There is a custom o ring commonly referred to as the micky mouse oring. Subaru dealer only as far as I know. There is also a regular one or 2 involved, iirc. I only bought 1 oil pump, many many years ago. I just get the seals and orings now.
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Just running no load like that for a short time probably didn't kill it. Add oil, start, look for leak.
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Yes. I have those also. I have to lay out a couple of harnesses to help trace out the power wiring. As much detail as there is in my 2 FSM s, they don't bother to clearly indicate which connector each of the wires is in.
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The bubbles can be intermittent. Yes, the upper hose should be full of water always, hot or cold. The pressure inside the combustion chamber is many times higher than the 13lbs or so that the cooling system operates at. Gasses are a lot smaller than water molecules. The headgasket leaks I am talking about are tiny tiny gaps or channels. I've been through a number of these failures. I've seen tiny leaks - a slightly loose hose clamp, let's a drop or 2 of coolant out and it lands on the block and evaporates, leaving no trace. If the loss is not caught by checking often enough becomes big enough to over normal the temperature, it starts the process. If they system is intact, and sealed, and not going over temperature, eventually the air will work it's way out. I've had some where a tiny amount of air seems to hang around forever. Keep watching it closely. Make sure you find and check all of the several hoses in the cooling system. Check the weep hole on the water pump. Check the radiator where the tubes solder to the endplates, and everywhere else. I had one where coolant would seep out of the headgasket onto the block and evaporate. Sometimes the only way I ever found these slow leaks was the eventual build up of stuff drying out of the coolant water solution. I have driven engines with the slow leak for weeks or months before the failure progressed to the point of making it impossible to run without overheating.
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Voltage through the roof on my BRAT
DaveT replied to dbenzmaine's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
If you use the stock wire and fusible link, the main risk is having nuisance fails of the link if some unexpected combinations of circumstances causes higher than stock draw from the alternator. Note - the fusing for the heavy alternator output wire has nothing to do with what loads you have in the car. It has everything to do with preventing the output wire from starting a fire if it should be shorted to ground [or other higher current draw over what is safe for the wire] while the alternator is running. Fuses are sized to protect the wiring. Conversely, if the alternator rectifier/s failed shorted, the link prevents the battery from starting a fire by melting the main feed wire/insulation. I almost burned my first car down due to an electrical fire because of less than ideal fuse placement, so I take this stuff seriously. Not the most likely sort of failure, but for those who don't have tons of experience to decide what risks to take, better to err on the side of caution when dealing with electricity. -
Low idle with my '92 Loyale
DaveT replied to TheEmpireStrikesBack's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
The link isn't working for me. Sometimes those screws are so tight I had to use sharp vice grips to grab the head to make the first fraction of a turn to break them loose. Then they unscrew easily. Don't strip the heads with an old screwdriver. -
Voltage through the roof on my BRAT
DaveT replied to dbenzmaine's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
Get a working alternator now. Or regulator - not as familiar with that age. If the regulator is separate, it's probably the problem. That over voltage can kill stuff. Maybe old EA81 won't be as sensitive, not sure how much electronics are in those. But if nothing else, the light bulbs life will be shortened. Not good for the battery either, and the rectifiers are probably being pushed hard enough to not last long .. The altima mod is not a drop in. Modify pulley position. Add wiring and fuse big enough to carry the higher output current. -
It's very hard to tell they are bad by lookng at them. The tiny leaks that cause mild cross contamination are tiny. Don't show up with compression tests, coolant system pressure test, etc. Oh, sure when they are outright blown, you can usually see a damaged area. Theoretically, a tiny crack in a head or a block could cause similar cross contamination. From my experience, and what I've read, that would be rare.
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I don't open the cap since it allows air in the system. Even if it's only the air that gets it the line to the recovery tank. Sharply pinch the upper hose, listen for gurgles and the jiggle pin. After a number of times you get to know what normal sounds like. Should be mostly water. And watch the level on the tank, should not be consistently raising or lowering every day. Search for small leaks.
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Get a jam nut I'd no bigger than the broken bolt. Weld it to the broken bolt. Tig torch in the the hole works good. Be quick. Once it stops glowing, unscrew it. The stress from the heat will weaken the grip of the corrosion.
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Oops! Glad you found the problem.
