CNY_Dave
Members-
Posts
2032 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
5
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Store
Everything posted by CNY_Dave
-
Below not applicable to bolt-in bearings... I believe there are bearings out there that swap out with the screw-type press... but I also believe I've never met one! Every one I've done has had me hanging off the lever on my 20T hydraulic press. Even if so, getting the snap ring out with the hub in place on the car I will say right now I would never have been able to do on any of the one's I've done. Way to crudded and rusted into place.
-
Another thing to watch for is loosening the nut with weight on the wheel, or tightening it by putting weight on the wheel to keep it from turning. Any weight on it with the nut loose can put all the weight on just 1-2 balls in the bearing, pitting the ball and/or race. Loosening with weight on is not an issue if you're replacing the bearing. I use a scissor jack and a piece of wood to apply the brakes to keep it from turning (jack between brake pedal and seat, with another board keeping the seat from getting smushed). Or get/make one of these: https://www.amazon.com/Tool-Aid-66400-Steering-Depressor/dp/B0002UNRB2
-
I received a VDC rear section awhile ago that I have never used (donated the VDC rear housing to someone with a busted one). The VDC VSS goes into a different place on the tail housing, and it's easy to look at the parts and see what the sensor is 'reading'. Those that have dome the swap either live with the AT light flashing due to the rear VSS error code, or I think one person has used the SW and cable to make it stop looking for the rear VSS (or something like that). I theorize you could connect the front VSS output to both inputs. My best guess is the front reluctors are the same. I have a 4eat out of the car and could look in to the VSS hole and see what a non VTD looks like, maybe someone could do same with a VDC trans.
-
I am almost sure that the front part of the trans is the same except for maybe the reluctor that drives the front VSS- the rear VSS reluctor on the VDC guts is different from the non VDC reluctor (VDC uses small reluctor on a shaft instead of the outside edge of the clutch basket). I don't know if the VDC TCU just uses two different sensor-reading circuits (or uses SW to correct), or if both reluctors are different in the VDC. The rest of the magic is the TCU software and the planetary gearset that replaces the transfer clutch. The VDC software uses at least one sensor the non-VDC doesn't, the G sensor located under the center console.
-
My hub-pulling slide hammer is a big fat bolt 3 feet long that goes to the thing that attaches to the lugs, and has a few nuts on the end, and the slider was a 25lbs thick steel plate, but now is 2 or 3 5lb barbell weights. I stand over it and slide the weight with both hands. On my outback (using the big weight) the hub was so stuck I think it almost yanked the car off the jackstands. Shook a lot of rust off too!
-
Fluid pressure is used to lock the plates together, all years- that is, no fluid pressure, no lockup. The 2004 change affects hpow the spool valve is operated only. BUT that doesn't mean there is any fluid running over the plated to cool them and keep them from heating & scuffing, and even engine running it was never made to accept as much slippage as you'd get from front-wheels-stopped, rear-wheels-turning. Rear wheels down, FWD fuse in, engine running would be fine at really low speeds. Like 10? 15? would be my guess.