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nipper

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Everything posted by nipper

  1. Oh another one i forgot. In the late 80's i lived in Salt Lake city for a year. I bought this big tank of a car, a 1968 Oldsmobile. It was HUGE, but then again it was the wide open spaces and cheap gas. SLC is very Religously proper, except for the heathans who loved thier tequilla. One day as Timing chain V-8s are apt to do, it threw a timing chain. We got it back to my freinds condo and we worked on the timing chain. His idea of working on anything required tequila. Some of his freinds came over, and low and behold, more tequila. Well we managed to get the timing chain on backwards. tried to start the car, it started and made a glorious noise. Timing chain #2 involved less tequila and that one worked. nipper
  2. I've done the lugnuts a few times in the past. I drove a honda civic off a set of ramps. The car was a 1200CVCC stick. It had a hard time with the ramps. So between impatience and stubbroness, i got it on (and over) the ramps. Had to get a few freinds to pick the car up off the ramps. A VW beetle, testing for spark before my electric knowledge was expanded. Did you know the path of electricity from a leaky spark plug wire through the zippered fly of a mans pants is the path of least resistance when compared to a spark plug? nipper
  3. I don't think so. I would go with a bad emission control of some kind. Something leans out the mix, then something compensates, then it revs, and the cycle is back again. ANother possability, a bad O2 sensor? that would fit. nipper
  4. My car exp goes back into the 60's when they turbos were carbed, and the 70's were carbed and 80's were a nightmare nipper
  5. They are rebuildable. they are really simple engines, all that they usually need are new apex seals. nipper
  6. Ok its been ages since i've seen one, so i forgot i'll sit back and get a refresher course. nipper
  7. I would start with all the obvious things first, like vacume hoses, cracked vacume fittings etc. I know what would make an RPM drop, but for the life of me i cant remeber what would do it on a SPFI. nipper
  8. When in doubt, start with a tuneup. If the plugs are fairly new, inspect them to make sure they arent fouled. Plugs, quality wires, filters. Also once it warms out, the choke comes off fully, so it can be leaning out. If you accelerate and the problem goes away something may be clogged in the carb. nipper
  9. Never say never. It is amazing what people and machines can do. But i doubt it too in a 96. nipper
  10. There are very few things that will make a subaru not start or hard to start. this is the most common. CTS tells the ECU how cold the engine is. The ECU looks at its program and says for zero degreees We need X amount of fuel and spark at X time (to make it simple). Now if the temp senser gets a dead spot in it, the car may not get enough fuel for the apropriate engine temp. this can cuase a hard start from fuel stravation or flooding. The reason its three vs 4 cylinders may not really mean anything if it starts normally at all other times. one cylinder may have a litle weaker spark, plug, or injector, compression etc. nipper
  11. There is only so much detail of all the possabilites and combinations on ineptitude on the mchanics part i can go into due to my own poor typing capabilites. I also did not critisize your comment. In fact I thought I was supporting your comment. I also gave several possabilities of low compression readings. So i am not misunderstanding the possabilities a little bit. On past expierience since WE can not hear the engine crank over the internet, smell the exhaust, listen to the intake, compression numbers are allwe have left, especially when workign through a 3rd party who is relying on a shop for "expertise" and data. nipper
  12. But we can see that in the numbers. We need the numbers of a PROPER compressionm test both wet and dry. A bent valve or bent valves would have a dramtically lower compression then normal, well mistimed will just be low. Also it is rare that someone gets the timing so far off that both cams are off, that would be another clue. Get a compression test. nipper
  13. If someone else is paying for it, make sure they are truly paying for all of it. I have seen some sleazy things with extended warrenties. Read the contract and make sure you are doing the proper steps. nipper
  14. I actually got mine better after a cleaning. It originally was 100 miles
  15. One thing you got to say is that the senders are at least repeatable. My 97 gets 180-200 miles till E. on E it takes 10-11 gallons. BTW you have two senders, they are easy to get to. nipper
  16. Pretty much it does. The more the cycles the more pressure applied to the clutch pack. Would be nice to see it work on something slick too. nipper
  17. I didnt think there was points, thats why i was a bit surprised. I would guess the ignitor pickup inside the disty. Those things can drive you nuts trying to debug them. and of course not cheap. nipper
  18. Sometimes thats the best way to measure things by comparison. Yes it has an open (which is bad). nipper
  19. http://www.ultimatesubaru.org/forum/showthread.php?t=46517&page=2

     

    Have you seen this? the cycle meter, the thread above mine?

  20. That is very interesting, what i've been wanting to see for ages. I would love to have seen how 1;2;3;R were affected. nipper
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