-
Posts
1779 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
1
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Store
Everything posted by frag
-
One other solution I tried last summer. Drill holes into the sheilds near the junctions. Screw in metal screws (the point of which I had previously dulled on my bench grinder) till they exert some pressure on the exhaust (inside) pipe. When you buy the metal screws the appropriate size hole to be drilled is written on the package. Pipes had been silent for months but part of the noise came back recently. Had a look and a couple of screws seem to have loosened and fell off cause of the vibrations. I think the absolute fix would be those screws + a dab of high temp epoxy or + a spot weld to freeze them in place.
-
Busted bumper
frag replied to frag's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
Thanks, I'll try the pop it out route. -
You might be right but maybe, with the thermostat out, your engine never reaches temperatures able to make the head gaskets leak. These kind of leaks happen only when the engine reaches a certain level of temperature. It's still cold outside right now in Nova Scotia, but when summer comes maybe things will be different. Good luck and hope you're right.
-
I know it's too late for you now fJ but for others, like me, who read all the posts, one tool that's very good to remove stubborn phillips head screws is a manual impact driver. It's about six or seven inches long, heavy, takes all kinds of screwdriver bits and is operated by striking it's butt with a hammer. Striking it while holding firmly in hands makes it turn a fraction of a revolution while preventing the bit from getting of the screw head's indentation and rounding it off. I think you can get such a tool in most tool stores.
-
If you want to assess if the viscous coupling (man trans) or clutch pack (AT) has been abused, there's an easy way if you can bring the car on an empty or partly empty parking lot or on a small stretch of calm street : put a chalk mark on the side of a front anr rear tire where they contact the ground. Drive the car forward in a straight line for approx 40 revolutions of the wheels. If the tires circumferences are close to 1/4 of an inch apart, the two marks will be 10 inches apart, very easy to see.
-
My hypotheses: 1) the car was hard to start cause excess fuel (present at startup: choke effect) was still present in the cylinder (mild flooded condition) because of the brief time the engine had been running previously. 2) the slapping noise was due to part of this excess fuel running down the cylinder walls and removing the oil that usually sticks there until next startup.