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Everything posted by nipper
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Well it is a true engineering question, ]as it is a real concer about putting a much bigger engine in a car then was meant for it (and a true structural concern) i will take your response as one of nievity about structure and leave this thread.
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Merry Merry Christmas
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When was the last time the timing belt was changed and what was changed with it? Depending upon the code if it fixes itself from time to time it may not stay in memory. I would get codes read, see what it is, and if you do not want to go through the pain of a compression test right now (holidays and all) get a vacuum gauge on the car and it will tell you quite a lot.
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Some people call them slider, sliders, or guides or caliper pins. Based on what you are saying i would go out get a set of replacment rotors (just easier). When a caliper freezes it can not apply a squeeze to the rotors which stops the car. The rears were just there for decoration. Also flush the brake fluid.
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Yes thats the reason your getting hard starts and probably poor gas mileage.
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I wonder how long before the strut towers meet eachother in the middle of the car or he pops a windsheild. You can't just plop a high output engine in a small car without beefing up the body.
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Since my 89 Justy is the last Carbed car in the US, I am going to assume this is a throttle body/fuel injection. Go right to the engine temp sensor. it can not tell how cold the engine is so it can't tell to richen up the mix. You do that with your foot using the throttle position.
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Overdriving means driving too agressivly for conditions. That "why make a car that can't drive in snow" is always an unreasonable comment. No mfg can recreate the long shot but just right combination of things to make a sensor not work 100% of the time. Things wear out and weather condsitions sometimes will make that show up. Wheel speed sensors do wear and erode, but like anything else, it is hard or impossible to catch right away. You also may have had some water get into a connector, mud, dirt etc. If you drive sanely you will never feel the TC come on. What it does, first it will cut back power to the engine (you wont really be able to tell unless you are really on the power). Sometimes it will fiddle with the AWD depending upon the year of the car. Finally if it is a fairly mature system it will also apply a brake if needed to keep things under control. There are times to disable it, like when you are stuck or trying to out run zombies.