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Loyale not starting a week after timing belt swap


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Hello fellow Soobers, thanks for reading.

 

A couple weeks ago, the belt on the driver's side went, so I towed it home and swapped it out. (Cursing my air conditioner the entire time.) Bought the kit and replaced both belts and pulleys provided.

 

I had help from an old timer with Soobs, and followed Milesfox's video on timing belts which was extremely helpful.

 

It started right up and ran like a champ. The following week, however, it started to have a very hard time starting. Now it won't start. It tries, but won't turn over.

 

Everything still lines up as it should, and the belts are still tight.

 

I have since just started replacing things that have been an issue on other similar threads on this wonderful site, but realizing now that I am wasting my money fixing things that aren't broken.

 

I have replaced the ignition coil, pcv valve, distributor cap, spark plugs and wires.

 

I believe its a fuel problem. How to Keep Your Subaru Alive is a great book that helps, except for EFI topics.... Any leads would be very appreciative, thank you for your time.

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have you owned it for long? Given it all its service interval needs ?

 

Two basic things to test when it won't start.

 

Easiest is to spray a proprietary starting stuff down its air intake and have someone turn the starter heading any safety directions starter stuff warns of. If it runs for a short moment - fuel supply or pressure is the next avenue to go down. A slap on the fuel pump at rear under right hand side with a hammer may jolt it to life for a moment ...

 

No change?

 

Test for spark with a plug body grounded to engine or body attached to a cap lead ensure nothing flammabel about an turn over starter.

 

spark ? yes or no

and you aren't really wasting money on serviceable items, just won't need to blame or buy in near future.

Edited by jono
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Swapped out fuel pump and filter to no help. Tried to start it and something made a pop sound in the fuel filter general area. Back to the drawing board. I did notice, however, when everything is zeroed in with the cams and all, the distributor rotor is pointing to the #4 cylinder rather than the #1 cylinder. Could this be the problem?

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Don't touch the disttributor.  If it ran for a week, the timing is OK.  Don't complicate things by moving the distributor.

 

Double check the rotor.  It can't hurt.

 

Look for spark at a plug wire.  If there is a good blue spark, plug the 2 green connectors together, turn on the ignition, and listen for the fuel pump to cycle on and off.  Try to start it, and then smell for gas down the throttle body.  IF there isn't any, try the startiing fluid.  If it starts and dies, then the fuel isn't getting to the injector, or the injector isn't working.
Don't forget to unplug the green connectors.

 

Plug wires can be bad out of the box, or go bad in a very short time.

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