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Everything posted by johnceggleston
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i have a 97 obw that has the entry unit but i have never had a remote for it. my wifes company car remote set mine off so often i cut out the alarm horn. thankfully sher has a different job and that car/remote is gone. but it still gets set off occasionally by some one else's remote. did it happen in the same place both times.? it could be a co-worker. programming a different remote should help. the unit learns the remotes code.?
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bent valves, replace the bad ones. have the head checked for flatness. don't force the cams. all 4 pistons need to be at the half way point to clear. hang a belt on it and see how it runs. BE SURE to read up on the correct timing marks before you do it. lots of subaru first timers get it wrong. links below.
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no damage to the bottom unless it was run dry or something. since this is a SOHC there is a slight chance there is no damage. i suggest you hang a t-belt on it and see how it runs, maybe do a compression test or leak down. the worst case is bent valves. pull the heads and send then out to be checked/reworked, re-install. this can be done with out pulling the engine but it is way easier if you pull it. especially considering the other work you may want to consider: timing belt, all idlers, tensioner, cam seals, crank seal, oil pump re-seal and o-ring, oil separator plate on the rear of the engine(behind the flywheel/flexplate), valve cover gaskets. do not do the rear main seal unless it is leaking!! if the engine isn't leaking, i'd probably just do the minimum. but it you do it all you should be good for ~100k miles. how many miles?
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if you remove the crank pulley bolt before you pull the engine you can check the timing. the crank keyway should be down, at 6 oclock position, when the cam sprockets on on the timing marks. pull the rad cooling fans to give you access, or the rad. both have to come out to pull the engine, as you know. but if the belt is off there is no need to pull it.
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i have never taken one apart that had a cable, so i do not know if there is a piece inbetween the cable and the speedo driven gear shaft. probably not. if you do a search here, you will find other a couple of threads on this subject or close but usually on newer trans w/ speed sensors. you may get an understanding of how it works by searching here: http://opposedforces.com/parts/
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this is all too common and can be very costly to repair. some say it is the cats and they need to be replaced with subaru cats. (600 - 1000$ repair) some say it's the front o2 sensor and it NEEDS to be a subaru o2 sensor, not generic or after market. (~100$ part plus labor) some have done both and still have the cel, and so they go to the "anti fouler" fix. search "anti-fouler" here. (cheap) but you need to read up on each before you pay someone to fix it.
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the front sensor should be a subaru part. the rear can be generic. technically the parts are the same, just the connectors are different but thre front MUST be a subaru part. get it on line . the other one can be cheap. or get 2 cheap ones and do the anti fouler trick. but there is a much greater chance the cats will not work properly if you do. www.subarupartsforyou.com www.chaplinssubarugenuineparts.com/oe_parts_cat.html
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this will be a lot of work to eliminate the drive shaft as the source, but... remove the rear section of the shaft, leave the front section in. and install the FWD fuse under the hood. the trans and the rear diff will still turn, but the front section of shaft w/ the support bearing will not. if it still vibrates, look elsewhere and put the shaft back in. if it doesn't, then remove the fuse. if it vibrates then, you know. if it doesn't then add the rear shaft section.
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the only real way to tell is to look at your bill. if i were you, i'd get this car home before i did a lot more than absolutely necessary. you may find on the drive home that it does not run quite as well as you were led to believe and it needs more work. which means opening it up again. replace the busted parts, or even all the pulleys, (you can reuse them) and drive it home. under this theory, the water pump would be a good idea unless you have a record that the pump is new. as long as you are keeping the engine, parts are not a bad investment. if the seals are leaking replace them but if not hold off. there is still a chance you may need work when you get it home. the other way to go is to do the bare minimum just to get it home. knowing you will redo it all, labor wise when you get home.
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the tie rod end connects to the wheel and is used to steer the car. if it fails it can cause an accident, the faster you are driving the worse the accident. have you had this shop / inspection station do any work for you in the past? i gouess not. i had my wifes car in for annual inspection, got a call saying i needed 500$ of work to pass. i went in and reviewed all of the items only to learn from the shop mgr, "oh, he mis-spoke, that was a mis-communication." yeah, right. if you go to a different shop and ask them if you need one you may get a different answer. especially if they see you as a new long term customer. maybe take it in for an oil change an while they are doing it mention that you are not going to your old shop because they tried to rip you off. "by the way, how do the tie rod ends look?"