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Everything posted by 1 Lucky Texan
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were inner and outer pads worn 'fairly' evenly on the old pads? Any sign of uneven wear now? just wondering if the rotors you got could be 'wrong' in some dimension and are dragging. Hard to ignore the slide pins being the most lilkely cause however. triple check them. I suppose the piston's dust boot could have been comprimised and the calipers need rebuilding..... Excessive heat there is bad - can even degrade wheel bearing grease I suppose.
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I have a tiny Radio Shack that I've been using for a while. It seems OK so far but is nothing fancy. subscribing for good suggestions as I may buy something to upgrade my own, and as fo a gift for soon-to-be son-in-law. OH - I just remembered, I found something the other day I meant to photo and post. An old multimeter/tune-up meter I BUILT from a Graymark kit in highschool in about 1972! OK, found a tiny pic on-line of what I think is the same unit;
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have you seen this thread; http://www.ultimatesubaru.org/forum/showthread.php?t=131575
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what did you go with? did it work out OK?
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total noob question be gentle
1 Lucky Texan replied to ratbrat's topic in Historic Subaru Forum: 50's thru 70's
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Subaru_engines -
Put new wiper blades all the way around on the wife's OBW. Trico exactfit on the fron, a cheap Anco on the back. Put a Trico exactfit 14-b on the back of my WRX - looks awesome. Put refills in the 08 STI aero blades I run on the front. Kinda fiddly but much cheaper than the whole blade. Got all the stuff ready for maintenance next month. We don't put a lot of miles on the cars so I do fluid changes and other related stuff in April and October.
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I use this; based on a suggestion in another Forum. Put a little on the back of the pads, between any shims, slider pins and the pad ears/edges in addition to the pins. basically, every thing that might move, if even just a little shifting. I'd say your mechanic is likely correct about the pins being corroded/rusty. I like to wire brush my wheel studs and the back of my wheels to knock off any corosion. Rust is minimal down here though. If it's been a few years or a lot of miles since changed, might be a good time to flush out/replace the brake fluid too. And, I can recommend Centric PosiQuiet Ceramic as a very good aftermarket pad. Subaru pads are also excellent. An 'upgraded' pad for 'spirited' driving would be StopTech Street Performance. All on 'decent' quality solid rotors. others will chime in I'm sure.
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If possible, move your other original axle to the other (EMPI) side. Reboot if you want. The wear forces will be on almost new surfaces. Try to get a junkyard axle and do the same - that is, get one from th eopposite side of where you intend to mount on your car and the bearings/balls will be running against less worn surfaces inside the joints. sad to hear the EMPI might be bad. maybe I just lucked out on mine.
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wiring diagram terminal designations
1 Lucky Texan replied to mountaingoatgruff's topic in Subaru Retrofitting
maybe TC is the instrument cluster/dash lights? -
laws. rules, training. They're going 'by the book' and sticking with year model, instead of looking on an emissions sticker to test it. Basically, the law probably says " 1996 and up " - instead of - " all OBDII ". unless you're saying the truck was also a '95 then, I have no idea - maybe call the DOT or w'ever agency runs the testing?
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tell him to search for either a CAI (cold air intake) or 'short ram' intake. boxer4racing probably has some legacy/outback specific stuff. He won't see any difference except in noise under the hood.
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hmmm, I can tell you on my wife's 03 H6 with weather package, the right rear will spin the left in the same direction (LSD). however, I'm not sure I've tried it the other way. I will try it in April when I plan to do some maintenance. But, I'm not really sure I understand your question. Also, can you be more specific about the vehicle and what direction you expect the wheels to turn? Someone else here may already know how to answer your question.
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I didn't see Subaru listed as an exception at the scangauge compatibilty page. Does your car's emission sticker have OBDII printed on it? Did your car perhaps originate in Canada? Maybe re-post your question with a thread title like 'Scangauge Users' and see if anyone has help for you. Or email Scangauge. http://www.scangauge.com/category/support/faqs/compatibility-faq/ http://www.scangauge.com/support/compatibility/after-1996/
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If it's OBDII, should be good to go. There were some very cheap code readers from ebay or Harbor Freight that folks had trouble with. They wouldn't read the ISO protocol used by Subaru. But that was a long time ago I read about that. If it doesn't read, you might be able to read the OBD I system with a blink code and the black (or green?) connectors. http://www.ultimatesubaru.org/forum/showpost.php?p=428662&postcount=9 http://www.ultimatesubaru.org/forum/showthread.php?t=81497&highlight=black+connectors