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Everything posted by nipper
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cheap calipers from rockauto?
nipper replied to the sucker king's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
WOHOO there are core charges for Justy calipers from some suppliers, go figure. -
cheap calipers from rockauto?
nipper replied to the sucker king's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
You just have to watch the shipping prices, as they are a series of warehouses. -
I am going with the driveshaft on this one, easy enough to find out.
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cheap calipers from rockauto?
nipper replied to the sucker king's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
I am using them in the JUsty (beck/arnley) and have no issues. -
I am confused. This is an automatic and you added gear lube to the AWD? What exactly did you add where, as the AWD is built into the auto tranny and usses that fluid. Now if you did what i suspect you did, you did something that made the deals swell for now. For now .... Once you loose Reverse it is a huge indication impending doom.
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Also drop the plan with as much care as one would use to install a cylinder head. You dont want to bend the lip of the pan. After you remove the pan take a straight edge and make sure the sealing surfaces are still flat. Something that seems as simple as a tranny pan can cause more leaks if not done right. Are you completly sure it is the pan gasket as they seldom leak.
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Gearing, especially on small engines, is not as simple as adding taller gears. There is limited power, and ideally you want to be right on the edge of the performance curves, if not actually into them a bit. If you wander much from this, you can actually ruin highway performance by makingg the need to downshift more. You are not hurting the engine, especially if you reduce your oil change intervals from 7500 miles to 5000 miles on a trip like this.
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IN all my years of doing these on small displacemnt engines I have always put them before. I have also always installed them with temp gauges too. NOw if you live someplace hot it wont matter that much, but places with real winters it would. Handy chart http://www.txchange.com/heatchrt.htm Sort of why subaru recomends 36000 mile fluid changes. With a cooler My temp sensor is in the hotest spot, the feed to the cooler. My driving (NYC stop and go) I have seen it as high as 100 over ambient, but that is peak summer). Anything over 275 is bad, 200 is on the lower end of high, and 175 is just right on average). If you live in a hot climate all year round then I would go after.
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I would hjave to look it up. There is always such a thing as too cool. All liquids have an optimal operaiting temp. When they are cold, they are thick. This means everything has to work harder as they are resistant to being pumped. The tranny also will hold gears longer when cold to aid in the warmup of the transmission. If you live in a very cold climate I would suggest a Thermostat on the line. IN all honesty off hand I forget which is which I would have to look it up
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I would go as a secondary, placing it between the tranny and the raditor. Keep in mind that the heat exchanger in the radiator serves two purposes. Not only does it help cool the transmission, but it also helps it warm up faster. If you put it after the radiator you may be keeping the tranny too cool.
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Test drive. #1 thing to look for is torque bind. Go out to a flat level parking lot at the end of the test drive and drive in a tight circle. The ar should be able to pull smoothly through this with almost no throttle and no kickback through the steering wheel. This is a 6yo car and should be looked at as such, not a car with 12,000 miles on it. I would expect it wil need tires due to age and sitting. Would recomend getting the fluids changed, otherwise sounds fine. Is carfax showing one owner?
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I would replace the ground cable too as it is just as worn.