Everything posted by el_freddo
-
98 leg with 2.2 swap running rich
el_freddo replied to Scotty1419's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVXHave you pulled this globe to make sure it's working or can you see it light up with the ignition in the "ON" position before you start the car? Cheers Bennie
-
Help me hack my ignition switch.
^ Plus on top of what GD has said you also need to work out a way to safely disengage the steering lock - you don't want that to engage halfway around a corner!! Cheers Bennie
-
engine swap
Like I've said previously - you can leave the EA81 intake as it is and just wire the carb's solenoids to your current wiring to make it all work. Just bring the emissions gear that came with the EA81 over with it or nut out the EA82 system and connect it to the EA81... It really is a simple conversion that would be worth doing if it is cheaper for you than to get and fix another EA82. Cheers Bennie
-
EA82 Gearset into EJ Trans?
Not if you want to retain the centre diff locking mechanism! The EA AWD pinion shaft is longer than that of the EJ's pinion shaft. This is because subaru designed the centre diff on the EA to drive the front wheels from the back of the centre diff and the rear wheels from the front where the drop gears match up. On the EJ they swapped this around, dropped the locking mechanism and incorporated an LSD on one side of the diff instead. Thus the two different sized pinion shafts between the gearboxes. But as Numbchux says - if you have an EJ diff ratio you desire and the RX FT4wd gearbox you can use the gearsets and casings with the EJ crown wheel, pinion shaft and EJ centre diff + matching housing. Cheers Bennie
-
Internally broken DR5?
The other thing that could have happened is that if you've really forced it you could have bent the selector lever - I've alway disengaged 4wd on the fly - just gently lean on the lever and wait till it pops out, sometimes with a bang when the tension in the system is released! Not always fun but on the rare occasion (for me) it is difficult to disengage 4wd this is what I do ^ Cheers Bennie
-
Wanted Single to twin lights conversion write up for the EA82 loyal.
Hehehe... I've had the same thoughts about this light setup guyph! Did you use a set from the US or a set off an MY over here?? Wiring it wouldn't be hard mate - a set of relays to trigger high or low beam referenced from the original wiring would be the go. You should be able to work that out and if no ask one of the fellas about "the relay headlight upgrade" and just add a 3rd relay to each side for the high beam on the extra light Cheers Bennie
-
Freakin' cooling system!
Also make sure the head's mating surface is flat - if not have them shaved a little to ensure they are. If re-installed with warped heads the head gaskets will not last long! Cheers Bennie
-
How to identify d/r 5sp??
Not necessarily true. The low range lever can still be mounted in the cab with the gearselector and not be connected to the gearbox for gear changing purposes - it is part of the gear selector setup, while this setup is bolted to the back of the gearbox for stability and connected to the gearbox's selector shaft, the 4wd high/4wd low selector lever can be tied off safely from harms way - thus a single range 4wd gearbox can be installed in an originally factory dual range fitted L series with the two levers still present. This is what I was trying to get at... Good to hear you've got a choice SmashedGlass - always a good position to be in Cheers Bennie
-
engine swap
G'day Chad. It's winter down here at the moment. I'm working and living in the snow at Mt Hotham - although it's starting to suck as we've not had any proper snow in 3 weeks after an awesome start to the season! It's currently 3 degrees C which is considered shorts and T shirt weather if the wind would drop. As for your question about the engine mounting. It will bolt straight in. You can leave the original intake and carb of the EA81, I only said about the intake swap to get the larger carb and pretty much the same performance that the EA82 had from factory. The EA82 had a bigger carbie from factory that won't bolt on the EA intake unless you do some modifications. The conversion is considered very easy. As I've said you'd just need to have the flywheel machined, do a tiny bit of wiring and it should all fire up without an issue. As for dropping it in the VW it will be a bit more work and will need an adaptor plate and flywheel. Why not drop an even better powerplant in there such as an EJ22?? That would have your bug going off its tits! Cheers Bennie
-
How to identify d/r 5sp??
The other way to make sure the gearbox is actually a dual range under the bonnet is to make sure there's the little lever above the front diff on your passenger's side - it should have a rod attached to it that disappears into the trans tunnel with the rest of the gearbox. This will make certain that the gearbox IS a dual range and not a single range with all the appropriate levers in the cab for the dual range Who knows, the gearbox may have been swapped for a single range just to keep the owner going - stranger things have happened! Cheers Bennie
-
Bought 85 GL, question time....
G'day starkiller! 1. I've found the factory air and oil filters to do an adequate job - replace them regularly as you should and all will be sweet. 2. You could have the radiator looked at - get it rodded. This is where they remove an end tank and push a rod down each cooling channel to clear out any of the crap that could have built up over the life of the radiator. I've heard the L's can keep going (just) on a radiator that's ~50% blocked! 3. Not that I know of. I do know that the fuel gauge acts differently to other makes - you have to get to know it! In your case the sender unit could be dead or bent for some reason... 4. We didn't get the high console centre over here but I have seen them over in the US. 6. Those places are ALWAYS your friend - until they get greedy and try to rip you off! All the best! Cheers Bennie
-
Freakin' cooling system!
This is an L series GL DL etc yeah? If so the heater core will still be getting fluid regardless of the heater control setting, it is not like the MYs with a tap in the heater hose lines. Swirling under the dash - any warm air coming from anywhere under the dash? Got a funky smell in the cab or wet carpet that you can't explain? My guess is that your heater core has a crack in one of the plastic end tanks and this is opening up when it gets hot then closes again when you let it cool. I had a noise that I thought was static in my speakers that had me wondering what was going on with my stereo system - about 50km later at speed on the freeway (110km/h) there was a little pop and my legs were getting very hot and I couldn't see out the windscreen as the steam of my coolant hit cool windscreen. Not fun, they are time bombs. And they can leak a little bit that's enough to notice at the radiator end but not enough sometimes to pick up in the cab until they've either developed a larger leak or go pop. All the best with it. Cheers Bennie
-
Which is the Least Costly?
el_freddo replied to gbhrps's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVXYeah I did the same with a set of drive shafts - they didn't have the proper CV grease in them for starters, so I replaced that after contacting the joint I got them from, mainly for their heads up about the product they were selling (a good friend/business that I don't want to see go under). ~1000km later and the outer joints started to click I've got a new set on the way as replacements, hopefully they'll last longer than the first set! All that said I've heard from several mates now that the problem with the chinese product is that they don't harden the steel properly, instead they cover the required surfaces with the hardened material that can sometimes be picked off with a screwdriver! As for a diff blowing - I've seen one destroyed in a '98 outback while street driving as a daily. Don't know why it went but it completely let go very quickly! Cheers Bennie
-
Just Making Sure...
I've replied to your other thread that I presume you started after this post. Best way to find out about things is to do a search first then ask if you don't find what you're looking for. There are some interesting bits of info you'll find as you search for your answer Cheers Bennie
-
Old Subaru's from little Iceland
Awesome pics! I can't wait to get a good DSLR... Just saving now! You guys missed out on the EA81 sedan, the US the EA81 touring wagon (in areas from what I understand) - In Australia we missed out on the EA81 hatch and the EA82 coupe - I would love to do up one of those EA82 coupes! And we missed the Baja completely, I don't even think there's a country we can legally import them from! Again, love the pics, starting to get the travel bug but would like to bring my subi with me... too many $$$$$ to do all of that though Keep the pics coming! Cheers Bennie
-
'87 GL Wagon with Low oil pressure
I would also say that the factory gauges aren't the greatest for giving an accurate reading - but they're good to look at and give you an idea of what's happening under the bonnet. An aftermarket set of gauges would be much more accurate than what the factory instrument cluster displays and will give you a clearer understanding of what's happening with your engine. Cheers Bennie
-
engine swap
Found it again: From this thread Cheers Bennie
-
How did I get the ticking again?
Yeah... umm... it's an EA82. They will tick when THEY want to! I had all lifters tick for two weeks after I picked up an EJ for a conversion that ended up being the catalyst for the EJ22 that's now in Ruby Scoo. Drove me nuts! The other issue with these lifters that I think everyone tends to over look is the spring inside them - if this spring fatigues or breaks you won't have the correct pre-load before the lobe tries to eject the oil from the HVLA (hydraulic valve lash adjuster) as it operates the valve... Also if the HVLA is old or had crappy and dirty oil used in it there could be excessive wear that's occurred and thus the oil escapes easier resulting in the dreaded lifter tick. Another issue could be the oil you're using. Wear and tear plus a thinner oil will help increase lifter tick and oil leaks all round. The best solution I've found to the lifter tick so far is the EJ22 - no ************! Cheers Bennie
-
engine swap
Mate, your 87 engine is an EA82, the one you're looking at is an EA81. The EA81 is a great little engine that is much more robust than an EA82. The EA81 doesn't have timing chains, it has timing gears. To put it bluntly, the EA81 is a VW rip off that's water cooled and made in Japan. It will work - but things like the PS pump and AC compressor will need to be nutted out as I've not done this conversion. You might want to look into putting the intake manifold from the EA82 on the EA81 so that the wiring is plug and play and that the engine should still meet any emissions requirements that are needed for your model of subi. So long as you keep the oil in it, coolant topped up this little engine is easy to maintain and will service you for a long time. There are some good power upgrades that are similar to that of the EA82 - such as the Weber carb. The flywheel will need to be machined down to fit the EA82 clutch - I just read about it and it's 0.8xx inches - GD knows it! This allows you to keep the EA81 flywheel and thus the timing marks on the flywheel that match the timing reference point on the EA81 engine part of the bellhousing. If you use an EA82 flywheel I don't think you will have any timing marks to line up when it comes to the timing of the engine. This is probably the only hardest part of this conversion Cheers Bennie
-
Just Making Sure...
Hehehe... the differences between a LHD and RHD vehicles. In Oz, being RHD, the power steering lines bolt right in without any bending required AC - I've not got around to having custom pipes made up but it is on my to do list! Cmiller: how have you not fitted the fans behind the radiator? I've got a 3 core radiator in my L with three fans strategically placed in the room I have between that and the front of the EJ. Just a little imagination! Cheers Bennie
-
at a loss
I think you've just answered your own question right there in that first line... Adding larger tyres is always going to stress the drive train more than the stock units - thus the weakest link is going to die first if it can't keep up, in this case it sounds like your EA81 won't turn those wheels the way you hope it will. Either look into freshening up the engine (rebuild) with a sweet cam grind to match with a weber OR go the EJ route. I know the EJ and 27's goes alright over the stock 23's, but I think 32s would be an ask as well without playing around with gearbox diff ratios etc. An EJ AWD 3.7 ratio gearbox with 4.44 diffs swapped in would probably be the best way to go IMO. The question is: How much time and effort do you really want to put into this? Cheers Bennie
-
would it be a good idea to use a electric supercharger on a ea81?
Why not try out a toyota SC12 for true supercharging? You will need to work out how to mount it, plumb it in and make it all work with the carbie. The other issue is the health of your bottom end... Cheers Bennie
-
running ruff, wierdest issue; explained
It's probably not the engine or anything you've done. I would be looking at the fuel system - if the fuel pump isn't holding pressure that will produce some interesting issues. Also make sure the filter is new! I'd also check all your vacuum lines and your fuses including those pesky fusible links. Cheers Bennie
-
Internally broken DR5?
Drain your gearbox oil and see what comes out with it. I'm thinking that there's a circlip that has been dislodged on the 4wd hi/lo and 2wd selector. The one lever operates the 2wd, 4wd high and 4wd low positions with a series of spring and dedent balls in the back of the gearbox under the flat plate. If a circlip has been dislodged (would be difficult but if the box has been abused or apart before it is possible) it will render some of the functions of the mechanism useless. Below is an EA82 DR gearbox, you can see the flat plate on top of the rear housing on the gearbox with the lever that selected 2wd/4wd hi/4wd lo and the rod out to the front of the gearbox for the high/lo range selection. The mechanism is in the rear housing, this is where the problem will be: Here is the complicated mechanism that does all the work for us - it engages the drive to the rear end in the rear of the gearbox and then selects high and low range at the other end of the gearbox: I remember that there's probably about 3 or 4 sets of dedent balls and springs in here! My bet would be that the circlip you can see on the shaft on the right hand side just below the upper part that crosses over the two shafts has come loose or is now floating around in the bottom of your gearbox. From memory the second pic is in 4wd low range. If you are or have been violent with the 4wd engaging, over time it would most likely flog out this circlip as it is the one that moves up to engage low range and back to disengage 4wd. Hope these pics and descriptions help you out. After thinking about it some more I've got some questions for you: Does it actually select low range and high range?? Can you feel the 4wd system binding when you turn a tight corner? - test this on a loose surface only. Are you sure you don't have a dicky 4wd switch that has the 4wd light remain on? What is it that makes you think you cannot select 2wd mode? Cheers Bennie
-
EJ alternator on a EA82?
When you look at the plugs on the EA alternator there are only two wires, the EJ alternator has three. Each letter corresponds to one of the wires as depicted on the plug sticker listing that each alternator has on them. It works a treat for me! And as Numbchux has said, I too have not got a wire from the ECU to the alternator and have no issues running the EJ22 or the alternator. Cheers Bennie
