Tech1967
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Canada
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Mechnician
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99 OBW
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Running unpresurised will accelerate the demise of the engine. If the HG job is done with care, the hose in the reservoir is cut back at an angle and the rad cap is cleaned with every oil change (6000km or 4000 miles) you won't have reoccuring failures. I am a Subaru tech that now does head gaskets for people that don't normally maintain their car with me or are passing through. I have 2 OBW that I picked up cheap and am toying with using a pressurised reservoir so the rad cap is never affected by crud on the seals and return valve.
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The key is still in there and damaged right? Possibly the crank too? With some very carefull work you may be able to save yourself. Snap-On sells a pencil die grinder, basically an air powered Dremel tool. The bits for it fit in a dremel so you might be able too clean up the key and crank with it to get pulley off. You can get a new key but the crank is a bit more expensive so keep it off the crank unless absolutely neccesary. This is finicky work and one oops could blow the job so be steady and be ready to walk away to try later.
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Or piston slap, it's part of Subarus hoops that we jump through to see if we can replace your pistons for you. The kind and location of the noise will tell what it is. Buy an automotive stethescope and check this link. http://remanufactured.com/Engine_Noise_Diagnosis_101.htm Interesting note, you may also notice a drop in the noise level from a tensioner when you kill a cylinder. I'm obviously too curious to make the best time I could as a flat rate tech when I start playing around like that but it was the first question I had when doing the piston slap diagnoses as directed by the bulletin.
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There are a few solutions for this. 1. The factory shield packing. 2. Exhaust header wrap. 3. Cut them off tin snips less than $20 at your local hardware store. With the header wrap there are two methods. 1. Cut strips from the wrap and install instead of the factory stuff. You do have to buy a kit and will probably use 4-5' of it tops. It's in shop supplies and I don't see reordering soon, you get that much. 2. Get the rest of the kit (stainless ties, high temp silicone spray for weather proofing) and wrap the manifold as you would any header. Cut some half inch pieces off the roll to insulate the rest of the mounting points. Gaskets will be obvious. Bolts, springs and nuts at the flex joint behind the cats are often junk. I'm not fond of the factory shield packing as even new it disintegrates with vibration ie tapping the shields back into shape if neccesary after crimping. A die grinder with a cutting disk and hammer and chisel are usually needed to disassemble, along with a bunch of nuts, bolts washers to remount the shields. I manage with a sharpened screwdriver, small channel locks and mini ball pein hammer for the tinsmithing on the manifold shields. Allow1 1/2-4 hours depending on interuptions and skill level. If this isn't specific enough let me know. Now can someone help me with making warranty time on these bloody headgaskets without throwing good prep and assembly out the window?
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Too much oil?
Tech1967 replied to mtbe's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
I think you guys need to look at one of these engines in pieces again. It's a boxer and the crank does not splash in the pan. If you were to have too much oil and it causes a problem it would have to be really full or the oil would have to slosh up below the pistons on one side under cornering loads. At the proper level the oil is half the pan depth or just over. To garantee this happening would require 6-8 liters of oil in the pan. obviously more oil would require less cornering load. When it looks like it needs .5-.75 liter on the stick .2-.3 liters is what it takes to get it to the correct level. Half a liter will take it up to somewhere between the notch and the first twist of the dipstick. This still leaves some concern over someone draining the tranny and leaving twice as much oil in the pan. "That can't be right, I drained the oil!":confused: -
Just put a length of vacuum line from one washer pump to the other. A regular screwdriver carefully applied will pop off the hoses. Bent nose needle nose, long is best, will get the electrical connectors off. Again be carefull. Two bolts and the tank slips right out. You might as well have some drill bits and a 6mm x 1 tap around cause you'll need it sooner or later. You really don't need any more room to get at the plugs. I use a socket with no insert to loosen and tighten, and the boot from an old plug wire on an extension to get them in and out. The benefit of the old boot is that as long as you get a few turns with that there is no way you can crossthread. I would say the torque wrench isn't essential but when in doubt it is intelligent.