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Everything posted by 987687
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When I was working at a shop I had someone wanting to mount normal car tires on trailer rims. This was sort of a shop that you go to last resort because your car is screwed anyway... I wouldn't mount the tires, he said he'd been to 5 other shops that wouldn't mount them either. Why? Because not only is it a bad idea, I didn't want to be responsible if something bad happened because I mounted the wrong kind of tires on the wrong rim.
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Is this the END for my 86 Subaru XT????
987687 replied to zooeyhall's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
Mine didn't completely snap on me, but it came close. Scary close. I'm honestly not sure what was actually still holding that together... -
Is this the END for my 86 Subaru XT????
987687 replied to zooeyhall's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
Do you mean the end of the rear tube frame rutsed off where the flat trailing arm bolts on? That happened to me, just replace the tube frame. It's actually not really that big a deal. -
When they wobble the place the balancer meets up to the crank gear gets all rounded and domed. Also, if the keyway is buggered up, it might not be seating all the way. Get a new one and make sure it seats up nice and flush to the timing gear. You don't actually need the keyway for the balancer, just torque it down good and tight.
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I have one of those pocket meters, I've had it since about 2001 and it still works... Probably because I don't use it very much. When I was in Canada I got the canadian tire brand multimeter, it's not great but hasn't had any problems since 2004. Only had to change the battery once. But then I also have a fluke 87V meter. And it's so awesome I never use anything else anymore...
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The Awesome Older Generation Picture Thread
987687 replied to 6 Star's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
That's awesome! haha. -
It did that to me once after I hadn't driven it for a while. I turned off the headlights and it started right up. Thought maybe it was a low battery or something. It's a brand new batt. though. I just ignored it since it worked. But I guess that was the start of my issues. Thanks. I'll have to go out and look at it, then your description will make a lot more sense once I'm looking at what you're talking about. I need to sell this car before it has more problems I don't want to fix... Speaking of which, how much for the part? I don't want to sell it with issues. Karma would bite me and it wouldn't start when the guy comes to look at it.
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That's what I did, and mine weren't even broken...
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Can U Bypass Bad Headlight Switch ?
987687 replied to roadsubiedog's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
What do you mean play with the switch? If you turn the headlight switch to have the headlights on, and that blows the fuse. I doubt it's the switch, it sounds like a short somewhere along the line to the lights. Possibly even at the lights, have you checked the bulb connectors? -
The ones I pulled out by brute force were destroyed. The ones I heated out were never ruined. And I've done quite a lot of those. Took a soft wire brush to clean up the pin and used a brush thing that goes into the bore (whatever those are called). Put it back together with grease, and it's fine. Basically it's fairly tight clearance, so it can't really get a lot of rust in there. When you heat it that breaks the rust bonds completely and it comes apart. Since these were cars on the road, they started losing braking power, grinding when pads wore down, etc. So they weren't left to rust for a super long time. I assume if you took one that's been sitting in a field for 10 years it wouldn't come apart so gracefully. I did it to my own car about three years ago. I had the whole thing apart last week doing major rust repair and rebuild some stuff. The caliper pins were still nice and free. No sigs of contamination.
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Seeing this posted like it's an anomaly cracks me up. When I was working in a garage up here in Manie 95% of brake jobs on 90's, and even a lot of early 2000's subarus had at least one frozen slide on each side. Take the caliper off and heat around where the pin goes in really fast with an oxy/ace torch. If you heat it slowly with a propane one you'll get too much heat in the piston/seal area and you'll ruin it. You need a lot of localized heat really fast. Be warned, most of the time the pin comes flying out like a rocket. So aim it at something that's not going to get hurt. If you melt the rubber seal or boot on the slide pin, replace it. If you try to wrench the pin out with vicegrips you're going to ruin the pin, the bore, and mar everything up. Been there, done that. It sucks. But you said it move a little bit... maybe you'll get penatrant in there to free it. The ones I had to deal with were frozen, solid.