idosubaru
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Everything posted by idosubaru
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Drum brake adjusters stuck
idosubaru replied to eVIL_NTT's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
i do not have a set. i went and got them this morning but the set i have is for an EJ vehicle, sorry. -
what exactly are you asking? don't use the word "internals" any more....tell us exactly what you mean: What parts John? (internals is not a part that shows up in a parts manual.) EJ25 pistons can't be put into EJ22 engine blocks. are you wanting to swap rods or what? crank, mains, rods, rod bearings, pistons, piston rings, cylinder sleeves....let's talk about some parts.
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Drum brake adjusters stuck
idosubaru replied to eVIL_NTT's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
i'd look into new ones or post in the parts wanted forum here, someone will have them. i probably even have some used ones laying around, send me a PM or email. -
Found an H6 transmission I'd like to get but would like to check mileage first before I buy. But these have the digital odometers and it's dead, it's a parts car. Can someone do a car-fax for me to check mileage or is there another way? Not sure if I can get a battery/car into this yard or not, but maybe a tractor battery is at least portable. 4S3BH806017664733 is the VIN google gets me nothing (sometimes it's worked before)
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subaru rear differentials almost never fail, extremely rare. positively identify it first. the good news is that if it is a rear differential failure it should be really inexpensive to buy a used one and more than likely the used one will last 300,000 miles if it's never run low on gear oil. they just never fail. i'm nearing 200,000 miles on 3 of my daily drivers and fully expect all of them to go to 300,000 and i'd bet a lot money the rear diffs won't have any issues making that. all that to say - buy used. even folks driving 1980's subaru almost all have the original rear diffs, they just don't fail. drain the fluid and check for chunks/pieces. if it's making noise there should be evidence in the fluid. or if it doesn't have any fluid that might help you decide too! rear differentials aren't that hard to replace at all if you're up to doing it yourself and there's certainly nothing special about Subaru's so finding a lower hourly rate shop to do it is a great choice in this case.
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who can make me a new master key?
idosubaru replied to dec0y13's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
you ignore the first digit - it's the last 4 that a lock smith can cut from, not sure why Subaru needed the first. maybe they do need it, but a locksmith will not. call any one in the phone book and they'll be able to fire it right up. but Subaru should be able to as well. -
in general EJ25 internals won't completely swap into an EJ22 block - the pistons are too big for the 2.2 sleeve. but i'm not sure "which" internals you're talking about exactly. you can swap short blocks, that's done all the time. you would also need to specify which EJ25 and EJ22 as there are different ones.
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bearing location and diff side flange end is the same. makes sense - this model was available with the EJ25 which would have EJ25 stuff and carrier bearing mount and the rear diff's are interchangeable so the flange ends should be the same. i just happened to remove a rear drive shaft from a 2003 H6 Outback on Monday and can visually confirm those things. i just looked up H4 driveshafts on ebay and it looks identical to those - but that of course still isn't very helpful but at least it doesn't negate your suspicsions either. now - as to length and trans fitting i'm not sure, though my *guess*, like yours is that there is a chance. not sure how to confirm? if yours is bad - can you remove it and take it to a junk yard with you to verify?
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parts interchange does not say that 2001 and 2003 H6 (non-VDC) transmissions interchange. i'm guessing they do, nothing really changed during that time that i can think of. the 2003 has onstar - hope that doesn't crack it up! :lol: anyone think of a reason they should not? found one that's only a few miles from my house for sale, so that would be a nice hit.
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blew rear main seal
idosubaru replied to soobie_newbie67's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
are you positive the rear main seal is the problem? they very rarely leak on subaru's....like really rare. granted after that many miles, etc anything is possible but it is rare and a huge job for one seal. make absolutely sure that's it. on EA/ER engines i only use Subaru seals, they are more consistent. notice i didn't say aftermarket are "bad". i have had aftermarket EA/ER seals not fit properly and leak. i've used fel-pro's mutliple times for EA/ER crank seals with no problems - i've also had one be too large and not fit properly - same part number as the rest that i had no problems with. i have used plenty of aftermarket seals that work fine too, but the few failures i've had aren't worth it considering the time and subaru seals aren't expensive anyway. others have had poor aftermarket seals too. good time to replace the clutch, throw out bearing, pilot bearing, and clutch retaining clips while it's apart. or the torque converter seal if automatic. at least replace the pilot/throw out bearings and clips, only a few dollars even if yo'ure keeping all the clutch bits. oil pan requires lifting the motor to replace so good time to look at that and make a call. -
Need help bad gas milage/power
idosubaru replied to Subaroo82's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
not sure about EA81's but some subaru exhausts have multiple cats - i know XT's have one in the y-pipe and another dedicated unit after it. maybe the bits are stuck somewhere in there from him busting it up or he didn't knock them all out. -
Need help bad gas milage/power
idosubaru replied to Subaroo82's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
clogged exhaust/converter? i generally don't suggest starting there, doesn't happen often on Subaru's, but it does happen and you've really covered a lot of the major items. does all of your driveline spin freely - wheels and driveshaft? can't imagine those being an issue without some actual symptoms though you mentioned the "braking feeling". probably just lack of power at speed. -
here are aftermarket pistons: http://www.importperformanceparts.net/imports/rodpistoncombo_subaru.html you might want to look into rebuild costs - they are rather costly. i got all amped up to rebuild a subaru motor a few years ago then started pricing it all out and it's not cheap at all once you start tearing into the block. i'd price out everything and see what the financial picture actually looks like. headgaskets, resurfacing heads, valve job, delta cams....you're already at the cost of just buying an EJ22 in my neck of the woods. more money, less power. you could also buy a car with a blown motor, install the Ej18, sell it, and then buy an EJ22. or buy a cheap car with a good EJ22 - swap motors and resell it. i could easily end up ahead doing that here, but it's not hard to find rusted out cheap cars that are otherwise in great shape out here.
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oh wow that stinks. i was kind of thinking that was what was happening but it's been awhile and i've lost sight of the innards on those things.
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perfect timing, i have a drain on an XT6 that i'm going to be working on this week, was working on other stuff on it yesterday. pulling fusible link for a year is all wrong! thanks for the info and leaks. i already traced mine down with the pull the fuse method, like which fuse in the interior box is causing the drain. but never got further than that. be sure not to use *anything* on the car that draws power while testing milliamp draw. i accidentally bumped just the door switch and the tiny draw of the light blew the fuse in my multimeter. might want to make sure you have a spare fuse on hand for the meter if you're using one. was annoying to blow it and then have none on hand to keep working.
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oh and many EJ22 and EJ18 parts are interchangeable, so you might see a lot of EJ22 commentary since that's the more common engine when talking about parts, etc. like lightweight pulleys for instance if you were looking into those - same part.
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what they said. block boring/rebuilds are very expensive so the obvious answer to your question, since finances are a factor - is to just get an EJ22 or EJ25 and bolt it in. there's nothing to it, it's really easy. i removed an EJ25 from mine and installed an EJ18, you'd just do the opposite, very easy. though i'd stick with an EJ22, much better motor and the swap is less work since your EJ18 intake manifold bolts right to an EJ22. manifold doesn't bolt to an EJ25 so you'll have to swap wiring harnesses, or get creative. not hard but a good bit extra work where the EJ22 is bolt up....and far more reliable...and much cheaper. they're a dime a dozen compared to EJ25's.
