CNY_Dave
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Everything posted by CNY_Dave
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The side blocks don't look bad, but the center support is drooping by about an inch. I pulled down on it all, it will pull down a little more, so I don't think it's metal on metal, and therefore is not the source of my pinion-noise (normal noise telegraphed metel-metal to the body). Do you have to pull the header to change the mounts, or just the 1st section after the header?
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In have replaced transmissions twice before in my garage, but that was a nice simple '67 pontiac V8 where I was swapping a turbo 400... can you do a 4eat without a trans jack, does a cheap harbor-freight trans jack (that'll fit under a car on jackstands) make it easier enough top warrant the purchase? Weighing swapping my trans vs having the pinion bearings fixed.
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On my '03 there is a mechanical switch that tells the wiper controller if the wipers are 'parked', could be a problem with the switch or the wiring from the park switch to the controller. Old cars were easier, they just shorted the motor to ground (switch was in the ground path) if the wipers were not in the 'park' position. A schematic would help determine if it is likely a short or an open.
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I have suffered through the material-deposition pulsation, and I think it is technically correct (the best kind of correct) to say the primary result is not a warping of the rotor, as the rotor material isn't being bent, but that material is preferentially removed from the softer areas, leaving the hard area where the pad material was deposited higher. Of course since the high-spot/hard-spot gets hotter than the rest of the rotor, there well could be some heat warping from uneven heating. I have heat-warped rotors in the past (on other cars), and it was always at a very 'short wavelength', that is, the ripples were very close together.
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H6, so an auto. Typical pinion bearing whine, disappears when there's no load. Just under 200k miles, fluid has always been at the proper level, always looked clear and smelled nice and fresh, was even changed a few times. No goop is going to cure it, but I'd like to see how long I can put off major trans work.
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OK, when I fly my RC planes and it's cold enough out that I roll up the windows on the sube I always put the keys on the roof- just in case. Today, keys on the roof, one back door opened, putting something in the car, I hear *click*. Uh-huh- the doors just locked. I did notice and unlocked them manually, but had I not, and had I left the keys in the ignition, it would have been a looong walk to a phone. It was not initiated by the fob, as there was no 'beep', just the sound of the lock motors. All I can think of is I just happened to touch the outer skin of the door at that moment and sent a static charge into the panel, but that seems unlikely. I was standing on damp grass at the time. Thoughts?
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The orig info was here http://offroadingsubarus.com/spraythenwipe.html but that is for a right-drive vehicle, I was able to use the photo there to figure out what to do on my US spec wiper switch. Remove the wiper switch from the steering column, and then remove the plastic cover over the circuit board (snaps on with 2 clips) Cut the track that leaves the upper-right corner of the resistor that says "183" then goes under the one that says "133", you could also remove the resistor, but cutting the track is easier, I think. The longer version where this gets figured out- http://www.ultimatesubaru.org/forum/showthread.php?t=136867
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I thought it might be useful to have a place to note problems strongly suspected to be caused by the subaru coolant additive, a.k.a Holt's RadWeld. I know what the goop looks like because I'm trying it out in my H6 (external head gasket coolant weep), but the problem was on my wife's 2005 Forester, which I assume had the magic goo added by the dealer after it had its head gaskets replaced (external oil leak). Anyway, on a trip the rad was not holding pressure, too much coolant was being sent to the overflow reservoir, and it was not sucking coolant back up from the overflow. Problem was the cap. Checked the cap under magnification, looks like some of the magic goo collected on the metal plate that seals under pressure and allows the coolant to be sucked back in.