
Tiny Clark
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Everything posted by Tiny Clark
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There are two things that you can probably count on. There is a relay that controls the voltage to the window, and there is a connector that you can disconnect to check voltages. You'll probably have to find the wires coming from the window to be able to solve this probem. The window may read a couple hundred ohms, not sure, but aircraft windows work the same way, using a thermal film.
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I'll have to check what I am running. They were on the car when I bought it in 2000 in Alaska. I used them for that winter, then pulled out the studs when I came over here to Germany in 2001. I've used them every winter for about 5 months at a whack, and they still have tons of tread left on them, maybe another 5 years worth. BF Goodrich Winter Slalom, probably quit making them years ago. They'll probably dry rot before the tread is worn out!!
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Ranger, those almost look like all seasons and not snow tires. Super subbie's look more like a dedicated snow tire, as the more space you have between the tread, the less tread you have, which results in more pounds per square inch in weight on the road surface. The more weight per square inch, the more friction.
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Are you absolutely positive the stat is in the right way? I don't know anything about the chemical reaction of the two different antifreeze solutions, bit I seriously doubt that mixing them will cause any kind of gelling. With the heater core disconnected, you could flush it with a garden hose. But why bother if it leaks and you need a new one. You can run without the thermostat to see if the system is flowing and cooling the engine. It shouldn't heat up as much as usual, in theory.
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There is a single speaker back there? Must be the center speaker for a surround sound setup, I guess. You can ohm it out at the solder connections. It should read about 4 - 8 Ohms. You may be able to hear the speaker scratching when touching the leads to it, if you are in a quiet area. If it's good, then maybe the output for it from the amp is bad.
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This is kinda like one of those weird wiring problems we experience on our C130's from time to time, very strange, but there has to be a simple (or not-so-simple, depends on how you look at it) answer. It's usually my job to find it, and I usually bat around .995. Of course, when you've been doing it for over 30 years , it helps...
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If you've driven around for a bit, yes, radiator should be hot. Was the thermostat changed with a new one from Subie? Sounds like the water isn't circulating to me. You can take off the bottom hose of the radiator, plug the hole or cover with you hand until the radiator is filled, then pull the plug. The water should pretty much gush out. You can also remove the thermostat and see how she does. It probably won't run to nomal temp though.
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Just a quesion or two, as I've never done this myself. How are you putting the new fluid in? I'm not sure it it's healthy to let it pour out of the pressure hose and not have any coming in the return line. Is a tranny flush that expensive? Seems like a lot of work and mess if it doesn't cost that much. You could always drain your pan, refill it, then repeat the procedure the next week, and once more if you want. If you are thinking all the old fluid will be replaced in the torque converter, I don't believe it will be, doing a flush as you are suggesting.