CNY_Dave
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If anyone is interested in how this (usually) works- The motor gets +12V all the time, and runs whenever the other side of the motor is grounded. The park mechanism is usually a disk/brush assembly under the output shaft that grounds the motor except when it is in the 'park' position. Intermittent wipers usually just give a short grounding to the on/off switch wire and relies on the park switch to carry the wipers through an entire wipe. The park switch could also be a more traditional switch that gets pressed/released by a cam on the output shaft. Sometimes the grounding for the park switch is a separate wire that comes out of the motor and gets bolted under one of the mounting bolts. If this wire gets broken or the mounting bolt loosens, corrodes, etc. the motor is fine and you just need to fix the connection to ground. Dave
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Yes, you remove the lower castle nut and press the ball joint tapered stud out of the lower control arm- the ball-joint stays with the knuckle. I was afraid it wouldn't be up to the job, but it works great (so far). Good grease on the threads and where the bolt hits the pressing-arm help a lot. Dave
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You could pull the diff apart and remove the ring gear. You could do that and remove the rear axles except for the end CV joints (which hold the wheel bearings together). You could remove the driveshaft to the rear diff if you figure a way to seal it (if you can't just do what's mentioned in the previous post) 'Easiest' way to seal it would be to just seal the hole the driveshaft comes out of. If you pull the driveshaft and there's nothing sticking out you could pull the seal and JB-weld a disc of metal where the seal goes, or do the same for a metal plate that covers the opening. If some shaft sticks out you'd have to pull the tail housing and remove that shaft somehow. Of course if the driveshaft also engages a bearing and it supports the output shaft, that'd be a bit more difficult. If you pulled the tail housing off you could gut everything that transfers power to the driveshaft and just leave it and the entire rear diff in place, just remove the rear half-shafts except for the outer CV joints, as mentioned. Dave
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I had to work hard to figure which front wheel bearing was bad a while back. To me, running it on jackstands is sketchy. If I resorted to doing that, a) I would have someone in the car ready to smack on the brakes at the slightest sign of trouble maybe do it with the wheels off (bonus- you can retract the caliper pistons and move the calipers so there's no brake noise) On mine, I put both fronts up, put it in neutral, wheels on, spun the wheel with my hand and used a mechanics stethoscope* going to the strut spring. * as in, 1/2-inch metal rod held against the spring, thumb over the end, thumb jambed in my ear tight enough to block all sound/air.
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Does the hum seem to increase at the same rate as wheel/vehicle-speed, or at about 4x the rate of wheel speed increase? The driveshaft spins 4x as fast as the wheels so the pitch changes radically with vehicle speeds, wheel bearings not so much. A bad U-joint won't hum, but the center carrier bearing can. If it's a VDC car the driveshaft wears quicker as it always sees at least 55% of the power. Dave
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The noise you describe is consistent with U-joint failures I've had on other cars. It'll happen eventually to almost any car with a driveshaft. If you can get under the car you can usually see the bad joint of you can grab the shaft to either side of the joint and turn one side one way, the other the other. Also, if there is a lot of red rust around the joint, it's probably bad. Dave
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snow plow
CNY_Dave replied to swilde20's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
Howsabout the snap-n-go plow? http://www.oxfordleader.com/Articles-i-2010-09-01-237473.113121_Inventors_create_snow_plow_for_all_vehicles.html The plow buddy? http://www.myplowbuddy.com/