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Everything posted by djcommie
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First Start Up Since 1999, What Do?
djcommie replied to Subasaurus's topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
I'm interested in some parts too, I have Paypal! -
First Start Up Since 1999, What Do?
djcommie replied to Subasaurus's topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
I put a crate engine from 1995 in my 78 wagon and used a pre-oiler which was a glorified oil tank with pressurized air forcing oil into the oil pressure switch hole. I poured a teaspoon of oil into each cylinder, poured some oil on the rocker shaft, and put 1qt of oil through the oil system before cranking it. You probably shuold put some oil on the rockers, in the cylinders, fresh oil in the tank and some in a NEW filter, and crank it without spark plugs until it builds good oil pressure. -
1977 wagon. What else do i need to hook up?
djcommie replied to kirzick's topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
The two pin (3/8" spade) connects to the battery positive terminal and provides 2 fusible links: 1 to the alternator and 1 to the entirety of the car's electrical system. The fusible links are a pain in the butt and were total garbage even when new, I've replaced mine with 60A Maxi-fuses (APX). The EA71 alternator should be 55 or 60A, and the car shouldn't really pull more than 60A, since the starter has a dedicated line (that you already have connected). -
I think they have them as well, I haven't had any trouble finding parts using just Amazon and RockAuto, honestly. Partsgeek got me a gasket set for a Daihatsu I had years ago, but the first two should be fine. I used RockAuto for cross-referencing sometimes and purchasing on Amazon due to my Prime account, but RockAuto really deserves the business since they stock so much for the old Subarus!
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- Ball Joint
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1979 Brat exhaust issue.
djcommie replied to 914Driver's topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
True dual exhuast (from each cylinder bank) would likely ruin any scavenging that the stock exhaust Y pipe does. -
The service manual tells how to adjust the ride-height, I imagine your torsion bars are tired, you may be able to 'reindex' them and get our ride height back. My 78 4WD Wagon sat with a few hundred pounds of parts in it for almost 20 years, and it took a few days sitting there once unloaded for the ride height to come back to normal
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Given a specific time interval and the symptom, I'd say that there is an issue with the choke system. Make sure the little electric coil is connected and working, it should have 12V when the engine is running. I had a bad voltage regulator cause my 78's choke to act oddly, not far from your symptoms. Make sure it closes mostly when engine is cold and ambient temp drops, and opens as the engine warms up, probably open all the way as your temp gauge just reaches its normal warm position. The other option is some sort of leak that stops/get better when the engine warms up, but the choke seems most likely to me.
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I am in the midst of redoing the front end of my 78 Wagon, so bought everything from Amazon, actually! I purchased the bushings for the radius arm, inner control arm bushings, inner tie rod, tie rod ends, ball joints, etc. I already had some strut tops, but RockAuto had those as I remember. Note that Amazon says 'out of stock' on most of that since I bought all the quantities they had! edit: I went to ball joints that used nylock nuts instead of castellated+cotter pin. and reused the factory bolts/nuts since they were still good.
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Steering wheel adapter - 78 Brat
djcommie replied to Grisezd's topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
I use a steering wheel out of an 83 hatch in my 78 with no troubles, the only issue was some trimming was needed of plastic at the back so it didn't hit the column. Horn and everything works! -
A really short 17mm socket (that you're willing to grind on a little bit) and a 3/8" extension may clear . I suppose you could just remove the rocker assembly to gain the necessary clearance, since you may want to anyway to get the heads skimmed and checked for cracks.
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Agreed on always resurfacing heads. These heads aren't the most modern technology, and they can and do warp, and the resurfacing gives you a bit of compression, which is always good!
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They aren't torque-to-yield bolts, they are reusable. Don't worry about spelling bolts wrong, they're studs anyway.
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79 transmission input shaft seal.....WFT
djcommie replied to G14 James's topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
I have some seals from this parts lot if you still have to have an original style seal. I think they're in entire OEM reseal kits. -
EA71 Water Pump Installation
djcommie replied to Brett!'s topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
Reassemble with anti-seize if you think the engine will last through this new water pump and onto the next one. Remember that anti-seize reduces the fastening torque of bolts by 5-10%, so if someone requires 25ft.lbs, torque to 22 or so. -
79 transmission input shaft seal.....WFT
djcommie replied to G14 James's topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
Its a different style seal, but dimensionally looks correct other than the height. That may not even matter, and it looks like the only difference between the two is the height and that the OE seal has a metal plate to divert some splash away from the seal. Personally, I would have no issues with using that in a rebuild. -
Reliable or cheap, choose one. If you can't stand to have a failure because you cheaped out, then don't cheap out. The Subaru OEM gasket sets have had revisions and are what the dealers use to keep their customers happy with their car, whereas an aftermarket set may be the original spec made by the lowest bidder.
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I registered here last year after buying a 78 GL Wagon for $500 off Craigslist, and though have contributed/bought/sold/everything here, I never actually posted the car itself! How I purchased it: How it is now: I'll get around to posting a journal of building it, someday.