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987687

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Posts posted by 987687

  1. I personally wouldn't use it, especially since it looks like an offroader.

    The integrity of the pan has been severely compromised. Next time you take a hit, it'll probably rip the pan open instead of denting. Also it looks to be worn thin in some places, wouldn't not take much of a rock to cut through.

     

    A good skid plate should also be in your future to avoid that happening again.

  2. It doesn't help. These gauges are notoriously inaccurate and thus provide no useful information in terms of engine health or diagnostics etc.

    It could be rising slowly because the gauge is tired, it could be reading low because the gauge doesn't feel like lifting the needle all the way, maybe the wiring is corroded and has high resistance which is causing a low reading. The pressure sensor could be failing and not reading correctly, etc.

    Do not worry about your oil pressure unless you put a good mechanical gauge on the engine to see what's actually going on.

    If it didn't have any oil pressure at idle I'd expect the lifters to be making a racket anyway.

  3. Cold oil pressure is completely dependent on oil temperature, and as such really isn't a useful metric when comparing to someone else's pressure.

     

    The oil pressure gauge on the dash is garbage, not accurate at all. They're OK for a relative reading, ie. it used to read 45 but now it only reads 35, but useless to compare against a different car. You'd need to hook up a good pressure gauge.

     

    Oil pumps on the ea82 almost never fail, you may have a leaky oil o-ring (cam towers, etc), or tired lifters. There's a lot of good information on it if you search.

  4. The return to center spring, or whatever it is? you don't actually need that for it to shift properly.

     

    Disconnect the linkage at the transmission and make sure it goes into all 6 gears from the shifter shaft. Once you've confirmed it has all the gears, you'll know it's in the linakge. Or whatever. You have one of two different problems here:

    You screwed up and didn't install the shifter properly.

    Your new transmission is screwed up and doesn't shift.

     

    Figure out which of those it is.

    • Like 1
  5. It should shift with the engine off, even if the clutch won't disengage. To drive the point home, with the engine off, hold the shifter in gear (trying to shift into gear) and have a helper roll the car. That should line everything up for it to drop into gear.

     

    Also do make sure the clutch fork is moving when you push the pedal, you may not have bled the master/slave cylinder properly if you took them apart.

     

    What did you recently swap, the transmission or the engine? Double check you hooked up the shift linkage, guide rod bushing, etc correctly.

  6. When I have to remove a bit of key from a lock I use a scroll saw blade, they're super slim and you can use it to grab the chunk and pull it out. Caution not to push it all the way in, otherwise your only solution is to disassemble the tumbler entirely.

    If you have to do that, you need to hacksaw or dremel slots in the dead eye bolts to get the assembly off the car.

    If it's the same ignition as a regular EJ car, you can drill two small holes next to the brass pins on the side of the ignition. Then you can pull the pins out with a pair of needle nose, or a sharp pick or something, after doing that the tumbler just slides out and you can disassemble it.

     

    If I can find one laying around, I can take more detailed pictures on the disassembly of the tumbler, it's actually really easy.

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