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Everything posted by 987687
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My new score :) and a couple issues....
987687 replied to rxleone's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
I like the redline on the speedometer. It's a turbo, what did they expect. People to speed or something? -
Rarest Old-School Subaru Part or Option?
987687 replied to Loyale 2.7 Turbo's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
It's an ea81. Rev it tills the valves float. -
Yes indeed! There's a lot of adventure to bed had out on the road with cars. I just hope I don't run across any more of the "what the hell is that terrible vibration" situations at 1am 800 miles from home. Makes good stories later. It's almost funny looking back.
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Wow! Nice find. I'd really love to have an ea81 car. They're all so awesome. Some day I'd like to get a relatively clean ea81 body and swap full ej driveline into it. Really working on your car means starting an engine swap at 7pm and needing to get to work the next morning at 6.30 am. Or breaking down in the middle of a road trip, or being on a business trip 1000 miles away and trying to find somewhere to replace your clutch....
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You can make hybrid axles to keep the ea hubs.
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If I was gonna EJ swap a GL, and not use it for offroading. I'd probably swap the EJ transmission as well. Weld up a custom crossmember, and the custom driveline would most likely come out cheaper than an adapter plate and flywheel. You have more clutch choices, gearing choices, and the EJ tranny is better. You get AWD. The 2wd/4wd bothers me on the street. But that's just MY personal opinion on how a swapped street car should be done.
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Whatever you do, don't use one of those reverse extractor things. They rarely work. If they do work, something else would have also worked. Like left hand drill bits. Most of the time if they don't make a huge mess of the stud, go off to one side, and ruin the threads. They'll just break off. Then you have a really big mess.
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That's AWESOME!!!! :clap:
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Hahah yea, considering I won't drive in for light stuff...
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I've always been meaning to put my GL on the scale at the junk yard. I drive in all the time to get parts, so I'll just ask if I can hit the scale on my way out for curiosity.
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Torque bind isn't just rear or front binding. Torque bind is the word that stemmed from automatic transmission center clutches not disengaging. But the asem word does apply to fried center diffs in the manual transmission. It's not front or back wheels binding independently, it happens because the front and back diff aren't allowed to spin at a different speed. Think of a 4wd truck in 4wd on dry pavement. That is exactly the idea behind what happens when a subaru center diff locks up. If your manual transmission was having a binding problem that a oil change fixed, something is probably wrong with it. If the front diff was binding up, chances are it's been ruined.
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Rear Suspension Arm - Can it be fixed?
987687 replied to morf's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
No, the ea81 ones are smaller. It has to be off an ea82. -
Rear Suspension Arm - Can it be fixed?
987687 replied to morf's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
Looks like the wheel side, that race looks pretty bad too. I don't think shipping wild be more than $20 -
I'd add a return spring. I measured the distance from the fork to the bracket. Went to a hard ware store and got a spring that was about the right length. Then cut the end and made a new bend so it was perfect. My car didn't have one when I got it either, and I figured why not add one when I put in the new clutch. There's probably a specific subaru part for the return spring, but $1.50 the local hardware store was easier.
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Rear Suspension Arm - Can it be fixed?
987687 replied to morf's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
It does't look like that'll allow the seal to seat all the way in. And it'll probably leak. At the very least use a dremel or something and make a flat place for the inside of the seal to mount, then yea, possibly use rtv around it to seal it. Personally, I'd just source one that isn't buggered up. A properly done rear wheel bearing will last the rest of the life of the car. Do it properly and never touch it again. -
Sorry, but that doesn't make any sense. In a manual the front diff and gearbox share the same oil. There's one dip stick, one drain plug. The front diff is also open. On EVERY subaru except the STi. With no exception (except maybe JDM stuff, no idea there). The center diff is a sealed unit. No gear oil touches the inner workings of the center diff.
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The garage queen gets a new heart ::ea81 build::
987687 replied to Idasho's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
Some cars like the BMW 318is actually use the manual transmission as the reservoir for the power steering system. All ATF. -
I agree with GD on that one. Around here, I can get a decent first gen with only minor issues for $1500 all day. Often less. I wouldn't DD a loyale. I have a GL and I love it. Wouldn't trade it for anything, it's a fun car. But I drive my $400 2nd gen as my daily car. Those can be had wicked cheap with a bad DOHC motor, slap in a 2.2 and call it a day.
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Once you have it so that the pins are touching, the splines are definitely mated. You can turn the engine with the tranny in gear. If the driveshaft or axles turn, you know it's mated, but it is. I usually use sand paper/file/whatever to clean out the holes and the alignment pins, then coat them with anti-seize. That way they slide together easier, and don't stick in the future. Still, sometimes it won't just slide together, I start tightening down the bolts one by one in an X pattern to suck the engine and trans together, nice and straight. Whether that's proper or not, I've done it a lot of times with no issue.