Jump to content
Ultimate Subaru Message Board

glfarnes

Members
  • Posts

    41
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by glfarnes

  1. today I pulled the timing belt covers and verified that the valve timing was on. I found that it doesn't matter if you turn the engine clockwise or counter between belts. I still couldn't get the ignition timing on the twenty degree mark and finally modified the distributor slot so that it would move to the mark. Cruising down the road at 55 it maintains temperature and obviously doesn't have a head gasket problem since it ran for over an hour. The temp is right on the edge though and will still heat up if its run hard. I'm going to wire the electric fan to run full time and see if that helps plus flush the radiator. If that helps even more then I'll figure the thing is worth spending the money on for a tune up. If it heats up again I'm selling it for parts!!

  2. Yes, i had it right on the center mark on both belts with the notches in the cam gears aligned with the marks on the covers I rotated the engine 360 between belt installation. As far as the ECU goes I didn't touch that nor did I see in the books anything about that. I had the engine out on the bench.

     

    The book says to rotate 360 degrees clockwise but I can't remember for for sure if I did this from the front or rear of the engine. Would it even run if I did it wrong?

  3. I assume it has a water valve but don't know for sure. I have the factory manual and the Haynes manual and I'm pretty sure I did it right. I've done it twice now and the only thing that even seemed odd to me was that they don't tell you which end of the engine their looking at when they tell you which way to rotate it when you install the second belt. I figured that it was from the rear as everything else on a car including engine rotation is from the rear looking forward. Am I right here?

     

    The engine does run rough and does not have the power it should. It has plenty of power on the highway but not on the hills.

  4. I just talked to the guy I bought this thing from and he said that it never overheated when he had it and that it just leaked oil. This leads me to believe that something else may be causing the problem. I changed the timing belts (twice now) and then the problem arose. Like I said the engine cannot be timed to 21 degrees but only to about 18 or so and then the distributor hits the stop.

    Just some more food for thought. Thanks for the help so far!!!!

  5. I thought about this too when I was putting her back together. I just figured how often do you really pull them off and so put them back on for the reasons you mentioned. Would Subaru have left them off if they didn't think you needed them? I think the guys that leave them off are probably monkeying with there engines a lot more than the average guy.

  6. This is the 93 ea82 in a Loyale. I got this car a year ago now with a major oil leak that the owner told me was from a blown head gasket. I ran the car and yes it leaked oil all over the ground, so being the adventurous type I just pulled the engine. I replaced the cam seals, the thermostate and the timing belts and dropped it back in. I couldn't get the timing to come in and was just two marks off the right degree mark. I ran the car on the road for five minutes and it overheated and after a few checks and seeing bubbles in the water pulled the engine again and replaced the head gaskets. I was really careful about the timing belts again but again the distributor won't quite make it (moving it a tooth didn't help as it was then out the other way). I ran the car on the road for about ten minutes and as I started thinking all was well it overheated again. Help!!

  7. Ok guess what your doing....

     

    a tune-up and most importantly, a fuel filter.

     

    I want you to unplug the injector. If the injector is shot, stuck open, with it unplugged nothing will change

     

    We have to start someplace :)

     

     

    nipper

     

    Had the kid do a tune up and really couldn't find a way to unplug the injector, but he says it starts and runs ok now. I guess I'll find out tomorrow if he takes my truck to work again.

  8. its been ages since i looked at one of these.

     

    SPFI, so we caule out accelerator pump, stuck flaot, cracked carb body, bas gasket.

     

    Stuid question, does it stop if you unplug the single injector?

     

    nipper

     

    I need to add some things here. This is my kids ride and it has not had much care. No tune ups forever and it has started intermittently the last few mornings. I pulled no. 1 plug and found it dry and still lots of gas pouring in from the injector. This is odd I know, but I'll update as we look into this.

     

    Jerry

  9. Front crank seal, cam seals, and oil pump seals are likely. Just do them all - you'll find the culprit in the process. Running the oil pump wouldn't do any good unless the engine was turning. Best thing is just to do it all.

     

    GD

     

    Would you know of an online exploded view of this thing with part numbers? It would sure make it easier to order parts.

  10. My kids 91 Loyal has a major oil leak on the front of the engine somewhere near the oil pump or base area of the timing belt covers. He doesn't really know the exact location. :confused: I see some fresh looking oil at the head/block junction but not enough to prove anything. He pulled the engine, so running it is not an option at this point. Is there any way to pump up the oil on this model without running it? If not does anyone have any recommendations on what seals or gaskets to replace before re-inserting the engine? I also checked the bucket of anti-freeze and looked at the oil and it does not appear to be a head gasket.

     

    Jerry

  11. I am by no means a Subaru window expert, but I have changed out many windshields. If this is a rubber gasket type that has to be cut out somehow then the guys that are giving advise on how to do that probably know best. If the windshield is the new type that is basically stuck to a bead of mastic that hardens after the windshield is pressed to it, then the way to get it out is to buy a windshield gasket cutter. They are not that expensive and amount to a curved very strong knife that is attached to a knurled handle for pulling it along. They also make a hot knife for the same thing that cuts them out like butter, but I used to just heat mine with a torch and it would pull about three feet before cooling off. No matter how you get it out, you still have a job ahead of you if it isn't cut close to the body. Here is the place to get one. http://www.windshieldsupplies.net/xcart_directory/catalog/Windshield-Cut-Out-Knife-with-blade-p-16137.html

     

    Jerry

×
×
  • Create New...