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Everything posted by nipper
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Ever since i had my 98 obw in 100 miles my gas gauge would be on empty. I tried all the tricks to clean it nothing worked. I also had this odd hiccup while stopped at a traffic light (automatic). Well i dumped in a bottle of Techron Concetrate plus. Filled up the car and it sat with a full tank over night. 38 miles later the gauge is a hair below full. The hiccup is gone. The idle (which was smooth) got even smoother. Now this may not work with everyone, but its the best 8.00 i ever spent. nipper
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ive always filled up the cooling system with the car running and thermostat open(thats how dad taught me), In all my soobies ive never had a air pocket. Another popular method is to drive the car on ramps and fill it. i think your owners manual will point out the bleed points, if not somone wil chime in. i think there is a bleed valve on the top of the radiator, not sure. nipper
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Yoe changed the thermostate? go back and get an OE thermosta if you didnt install one. Next get the airpocket out of the engine, thats the cause of your trouble. Why did you change the T-state in the first place. What year is this car. Another possability is a cloged radiator or low on coolant. Good news is that since you have hot heat its not a Head Gasket. Are your cooling fans operating nipper
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One of the reasons why cars dont swim very well, Drowning is very ugly. nipper
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hrmmm there is the ever famous hose under the airbox that always seems to be the root of mysterious problems like this. Look closely around the airbox and see if you missed a hose. Knock semsor can make driveability issues. if it is realy the knock sensor its not that expensive (buy it yourself from https://www.subarugenuineparts.com/oe_parts_cat.html ) then have the mechanic install it if you cant yourself. It can affect the way the car runs (in a big way) and i would replace it. nipper
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No we are not talking about turning, we were talking about tire sizes and rotaional speed. i was trying to explain how tires roatate at different speeds and the system will allow ofor SOME SHORT DURATION speed differnces of up to 20% (do the math thats not alot of differnce). That is why the system can only tolerate a 1/4 inch variation in circumfrecne of tires. In a traight line exceed that you will fry your clutch pack or your center differential, its that simple. Also playing with tire inflation to match circumfrance can be dangerous. Another possability is (this is on paper only i am not condoning this at all) is to have two new tires on the same side of the car. Assuming the older tires are the same wear, this would cause the front and rear drivshafts (yes there is a driaveshaft in the front, technically its the transmission output shaft but for sake of argument its a driveshaft). Now if you have a visous lsd you may burn out the lsd. A mechanical LSD should be able to tolerate this small diffenence in wheel speed. Best thing to do is either by 4 new tires, or have the replacemnt tire shaved. you can get four used tires and measure the circumfrance off the car and match them up also. nipper
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i did that purpously. See we need more information, same as you would want from me. How many miles are on the car. What kind of tranny. There are a few 100 reasons the CEL can come on (some without any symptons). Without knowing the code(s), or any of the symptons (if any) we really cant help you. nipper
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thats only if you go straight forever. Once you turn the front wheels you have four tires running at four differnt speeds, feeding two driveshafts. But hey, its not my 1000.00 dollar repair if you decide to do this to the car , and not my car you going to bang up so have fun If your talking about this for s**t and giggles thats fine, but for driving in the real world, i strongly advise against it. nipper
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This is for a raio controlled car but its the best explination i can find http://www.rctek.com/general/differentials_basics.html Your simple logic is right, but you forget the front wheels turn. therefore the front axle covers ground at a differnt speed then the rear axle. try this too http://auto.howstuffworks.com/four-wheel-drive.htm http://www.tirerack.com/tires/tiretech/techpage.jsp?techid=18 AHA http://www.trucktrend.com/features/tech/163_0206_four_wheel_drive/ Why Differentials? If we didn't have to turn and weren't concerned with noise and tire wear, trucks wouldn't need differentials. But every time a truck changes direction, the front wheels scribe a larger arc than the rear's, and the outside tires do the same relative to the inside tires. This can be accomplished without differentials, but makes steering difficult and locks everything together. A differential allows wheels to operate with some independence, so that the inside tire doesn't travel the same distance as the outside tire or the rear tires the same as the front. In turn, the tire doesn't bark while it turns in place and the truck doesn't feel like it's trying to jack itself up (often referred to as "binding" or "driveline windup"). and better http://www.4x4abc.com/4WD101/def_turnfull.html (explains differnt wheel rpms) i should have looked for these first this way i wouldnt have to explain it
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Hydraulic hybrid technology!
nipper replied to sketron13's topic in Old Gen.: 80's GL/DL/XT/Loyales...
Ford was going to do this on thier f250's but they droped it because it was expensive, noisey and heavy. Hydraulic pumps are not quiet. http://www.designnews.com/article/CA220671.html nipper