matt167
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Everything posted by matt167
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If the wheel being loose ovaled the lug holes, the conical seat will not seat correctly and they will loosen. Dealt with that on an older Chrysler Concorde where the wheels loosened up from never being tightened. Destroyed the seats and then the wheels would not stay tight until the rims were replaced
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It looks pretty good... Looks that is. Something has kept it from being driven or sold for a long time and that usually means mechanical faliure. Black oil and low coolant nails it. On a car which has not been made for over 25 years, that means the only economical way to get one going is using a running parts car... It was built off the Japanese Kei car platform so it's not related to any other USDM Subaru.
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The Justy pretty much, was a stretched and widened KEI car.. It was based off the Subaru REX. They added 2 cylinders to the 550cc EK23 engine basically and it became the 1.0L Justy engine Really the car sucked so bad that they made them 10 years, then cancelled the USA market after only a few years ( 1987-1994 ) and then from 1995- on, had other vehicles re badged
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Need the 2005 heads and intake, you could use the 2.2L short block though it is not ideal
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My shop sells Continental. Or rather we can order them in for customers. They are garbage, overpriced crap. They might have decent traction when new, but Continental uses a soft rubber compound ontop of a harder compound to keep tires that will last. Some other companies do that too. They only have good traction for 1/4 the time they will last.. The only good part of Continental is the 30/60 day satisfaction guarantee.. A number of times, Customers have used their satisfaction guarantee to get something else.. I would recommend the General Altimax RT43. It's great on Subaru and what we normally recommend even though it's not a tire we have in stock
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Ecu question
matt167 replied to dp213's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
1999 is maf, 2000-1 is map. Not going to work well. Try something else first -
I've now pulled the engine and chucked it up on my stand. Went through the parts she has in the way they left them. Everything is there except the new timing belt she bought and a few bolts I know are missing... But, pulled clutch to put the stand on, and it's junk. Factory exhaust manifolds are junk rusted crap. Up pipe is the stock catted pipe so it's junk even if it's not. Turbo has oil in it, so it needs a cartridge. Becomes a point of, get it running cheap or send it down the road.. The car itself is still good in appearance and the underside is spotless but I feel the rocker covers are hiding ugly since there is slight evidence as it is with them on
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I agree, but she was dead set on a WRX when she was looking. Would not take a regular Impreza. But she was also more financially stable then. She also owes the bank for another year.. I'm actually the one who told her to get this car when I looked it over. It was all stock in and out. She got 2 years nearly trouble free.
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I know he was cranking the engine over trying to remove the bolts from the back side of the flywheel.. She had told me he needed a " special tool " to get those bolts out, with a pic he took of it, and I was like " Uhh, NO that's backwards ".. It was shortly after that he gave up because he couldn't figure it out, and she had to work on getting car up here. He also made her buy head bolts because he thought they were one time use. I had told her to tell him, no they were not and to take the car from him if he refused because he could mess up the torque sequence since he didn't know chit. and I had also provided the FSM for her car to her, so that she could give it to him. Still he made her buy them, and they are cheap aftermarkets I'm not sure I want to use anyway. How it happened was, he ran a local detailing/ minor exterior repair shop for a short time. She knew him vaguely and had an appointment to have him install her headlights she got. Head gaskets blew earlier that day, and she still went to the appt on her way back to her house, and then he started helping her with it doing amateur stuff ( thermostat, try bleeding ect... ). Then said he could do the head gaskets for little money. So he really did use his business model, to realistically wreck the car.
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The guy was stuck trying to pull the clutch off the flywheel from the backside of the access hole ( the one for automatics ). Evidently thought he needed a special tool to pull those bolts off... Does that tell you anything? He was going to pull engine. I'm not sure why he was doing what he was doing and I don't think even he knew.. I've pulled and replaced many Subaru engines and I would never think of pulling the timing set off prior. There is no reason The engine prior was tired, used a TON of oil, likely cracked ring lands. Add in possible valve damage and who knows what, and the cheapest option out is a new used engine, which i have.. We were only going to try to limp the old EJ205 along anyway
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A good friend of mine, finally got her car to me after the last person she had working on it gave up... Back story is we have always been really close, sorta complicated friendship... Head gaskets blew on her '04 WRX and I told her that is what was wrong. I was busy at the time but would have done the job. She did not want to bother me and had someone else she thought she could trust, attempt it. All he did was probably $1-2k in damages as well as the car was keyed while on his property. Pulled intake and couldn't figure out how to get engine out.. She picked a real winner Rotated the engine over with timing covers and belt removed. I'm not really sure why that would even be considered removed at that point. The engine has to come out anyway. But now, probably some valve issues at least. It has spun over 100% disassembled the intake, pulled A/C bracket entirely. Various sensors ect... Pulled A/C pump rather than set aside... Now, I'm the lucky one that gets to fix it, and the cheapest way for her is to buy my EJ205 off of me, and I'll long block it for her The shop was humid enough that the aluminum on the block is getting corrosion and all the timing components are rusty, so I'm fairly positive the A/C system needs a drier at least
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A good friend of mine, finally got her car to me after the last person she had working on it gave up... Back story is we have always been really close, sorta complicated friendship... Head gaskets blew on her '04 WRX and I told her that is what was wrong. I was busy at the time but would have done the job. She did not want to bother me and had someone else she thought she could trust, attempt it. All he did was probably $1-2k in damages as well as the car was keyed while on his property. Pulled intake and couldn't figure out how to get engine out.. She picked a real winner Rotated the engine over with timing covers and belt removed. I'm not really sure why that would even be considered removed at that point. The engine has to come out anyway. But now, probably some valve issues at least. It has spun over 100% disassembled the intake, pulled A/C bracket entirely. Various sensors ect... Pulled A/C pump rather than set aside... Now, I'm the lucky one that gets to fix it, and the cheapest way for her is to buy my EJ205 off of me, and I'll long block it for her The shop was humid enough that the aluminum on the block is getting corrosion and all the timing components are rusty, so I'm fairly positive the A/C system needs a drier at least
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So, I'm working on a '04 WRX that was in a 'not shop' for a head gasket job and timing belt just to get the car back on the road... And the guy working on it was a clueless monkey who claimed to have a clue but, had less than an incling of a clue... He gave up on it partially dissasembled but engine still in car What we learn today is that you don't pull the timing covers and timing belt before pulling the engine, especially if you plan to roll the engine over... Now essentially the best way out is a new or used long block. Since it was so tired anyway ( EJ207 was the eventual swap ) So yeah, Subaru's are also susceptible of incapable mechanics
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If the gaskets are not blown at the moment, I would just throw new gaskets in. Don't worry too much. May blow again but done properly will still last a while.. If your into this trying to make money, I can't imagine making much. Swapping pistons around won't be seen as a selling point and price won't reflect the effort.