Jump to content
Ultimate Subaru Message Board

iluvdrt

Members
  • Posts

    867
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by iluvdrt

  1. 3 hours ago, pontoontodd said:

    Nothing against Subiworks but didn't see any long travel suspension on their facebook page or website.  Hotbits and other companies sell long travel struts, TSS fab built a super wide STI (WRX?) with a lot of suspension travel.

    Its not on his website. The white forester he drives has the suspension though, and its not garbage Hotbits. Its all made in house. 14" of travel in the rear and 12" in the front. I've personally seen him take 2' tall whoops at 45-50 mph and be completely fine. 

    This is one of those lifts not advertised because people freak out about the cost when a ADF lift is 1/4 the price.

  2. I got the new bars installed. They are amazing. They easily handle the 300LBS of overland gear I carry every day, and only let the back dip about another inch with up to 500 lbs in the back. Rear diff clearance with 300 lbs in the back is at 12" . Flex wasn't hampered at all. These are a great purchase, and greatly improved the ride quality and handling of my Brat. I recommend them for anyone wanting a more firm suspension for any reason.

  3. So after a lot of work, mailing in a set of torsion bars from my Brat, paying for the initial machine work and engineering design, and a 8 week turn around, I happy to announce that you can now order new torsion bars for your EA81 chassis from Swayaway here in California. They will run $325 a set and will offer you a spring rate that's 20-25% stiffer than stock without loosing any of the rotational limits the stock ones had. Actually, Swayaway claims their bars will out perform the OEM bar in every single matrix, and they're guaranteed not to sag or break. You can check out their web site at www.swayawaycom. They make very high end products.

    So what does this mean:

    Better handling, no more having to crank the torsion bars for heavier loads, no more broken torsion bars, better articulation, and a new parts option for our aging suspension. I will be receiving my set this week and will do a comprehensive comparison to place here and on FB. Once I do that and ensure fit and finish is good, Ill update this post with the PN. He made 3 sets, 1 for me, 2 for immediate purchase, and any orders after those will be made to order.

    • Like 4
  4. If I type in the bone stock numbers for a complete 253 using a +8 piston dome it says the compression is 7.49. I don't think that dome volume is right Bratman. EJ253 is 9.5-10:1 

     

    If I use all stock data for a 253 with a -12 dome its 9.25 which is way more realistic. -16 piston (which is what replacement pistons are) is 9.7:1. and that is with stock 253 heads and 0.026 quench. That's pretty realistic as well.

  5. The dome volume is from another site, but even aftermarket upgraded pistons range from -16 to -23 so its all I can go off of. 

     

    The quench for the Cometic gasket is 0.030. I called them.

     

    Why use 50cc combustion chamber? EJ22E single port P1 heads are only 41CC.

     

    remember this is a EJ253 (NOT 25D) with phase 1 EJ22E single port heads.

  6. Here is what I came up with for a EJ 235 with P1 EJ22E heads. This should work.

     

    253 Bore 3.92"

    253 Stroke 3.11"

    22 Cyl Head volume 41cc

    253 Effective 253 dome volume -12.2CC

    253 Deck clearance 0.16"

    Compressed gasket (cometic h1631spk051s) 0.030"

    253 number of cyl 4

     

    Compression ratio 10.26:1

    total displacement 150.14 in/3

    Total displacement 2461.31cc

     

    So 10.26:1 is pretty good and certainly not within melting the pistons threshold. A stock EJ 253 is 10.1:1 compression so this is just a tad bit bigger bump with a bit more restrictive head that the 253 came with. Should be good for about 170-180 CHP or there a bouts.

     

    I have read on numerous other forums that this engine requires about 30* of timing to run well on at least 91 octane. The EJ22E ECU from what I can tell can pull as much as 34*, so this combo should work out fine.

  7. I am going to bump this, as I have a few questions.

     

    I got a good EJ253 (1 blown HG, <100k miles) for free as I am planning on building a frankenmotor. I currently have 96 EJ22 heads (single port exhaust) on my 96 EJ swap in my Brat.

     

    I was going to use the EJ22 head bolts, and Cometic  H1631SPK051 hybrid gaskets with the 253. Is this a good combo, or should I use another gasket like the Subaru 11011AA770 standard EJ gasket?

     

    I will also be getting Delta Cams torque grind.

     

    Thanks for the tips

  8. 82 Brat DL

    5 spd DR w/ Jerrys kit

    EJ22 with ADF adapter and SPEC stage 3 clutch

    rear disc brakes

    reupholstered interior

    GL dash swap

    HID head lights

    full LED conversion

    4" ADF lift

    EA82 front springs

    clocked torsion bars

    lowered bump stops

    PS conversion

    6 lug conversion

    15" Method Standard wheels

    215-75-15 BFG AT TA KO2

    Restored Snug top

    STi Spec C roof vent

    all new bushings

    new struts/ shocks

    new brake lines

    WALBRO 155 GPH fuel pump

    Custom 1 piece rear drive shaft

    JVC head unit with 4 kenwood speakers

    modified 1st gen A bar

    Nilight 22" light bar and 2 pods

     

    In the works: tube lower control arms and Forester knuckles/ struts/axles, Sway-A-Way rear torsion bars

    post-1532-0-57090600-1523470726_thumb.jpg

    post-1532-0-19950200-1523470893_thumb.jpg

    post-1532-0-65504900-1523470910_thumb.jpg

    • Like 2
  9. Just spent the last few days reading this entire thread. Its crazy what all you have done/ been through with this car. The rust you have to deal with is crazy. I am originally from Ohio, but haven't lived there much the past 17 years so I have forgotten how bad it gets with all of the road salt. Its also easy to see how my Brat has survived all these years having lived in Cali its whole life.

     

    Nice work on the outback though, your repairs, and mods are impressive. I would venture to guess about all of your problems electrically are related to the corrosion of grounds, especially on body panels. Anyways, keep up the good work. I am excited to see how this turns out with the 6MT swap.

  10. I am not sure if it is brass or not. Ill bypass it for now, take some vacation and try to get it out. There is an old school radiator shop down the street from my house. Hopefully he can mend it. Its beginning to get really hard to keep this ol' girl on the roads these days. Of course it doesn't help I go camping with it I am sure.

  11. OK guys, What are my options here. My heater core is leaking in my 82 Brat, I put stop leak in it for now, but I know that isn't permanent and I should remove it ASAP.

     

    Its about to be summer in SoCal which means I don't need to replace it yet, but I would like to before next winter. I have heard an EA82 core fits, possibly find one on Ebay (How good are these? Are they new?), and then there is the struggle of removing it. I really don't want to remove the entire dash since it is in pristine condition. Some of those old plastic pieces like to crack and break. Does anyone have the write up for removing it by cutting the heater box?

     

    Lastly, what about the Vintage Air small truck/car HVAC units? Those sell for about $400 with AC (I have an EJ). 

     

    Thanks for any help.

     

     

  12. Let me help a little bit on this. I sold Mark (lgbmarco) the EA81 with weber 32/36 and MSD 6AL ignition as well as a redline fuel pump that came out of my brat when I did the EJ22 conversion.

     

    In short, Mark's 1980 Coupe is sweet. Its a "California Edition" which I have never heard of; maybe it was a dealer option? IIRC it has rear window louvers, very unique wheels, and a sweet decklid luggage rack on the back. More importantly is that he kept it covered and being in SoCal it has 0 rust!Its in very good shape. He is an old school, super cool hotrodder, not a vintage Subaru guy.

     

    He got a huge run around getting the EA-71 engine rebuilt it came with, and I think it was on the "old school FB group" he came across my engine FS. Other members assured him he could convert his EA71 to EA81 IF he acquired the correct transmission. Mark has been trying to find a EA81 FWD transmission and flywheel for about a year now....maybe more. The guy in Norway he bought the transmission from sold him a 4spd DR EA81 transmission, NOT a front wheel drive.

     

    What Mark needs is a EA81 FWD transmission, starter, and flywheel. So if you have those things, please reach out to him or me and lets get one more Suby on the road.

     

    Additionally, I have never done this conversion (and will help him), so if anyone has any insight on it, please drop a line. Thanks.

     

    -Jason

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...