
cookie
Members-
Posts
3059 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
1
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Store
Everything posted by cookie
-
I am also a bit purplexed that the cold of the US does not seem to be noticed by several manufactuers that give different specs for Canada. Certainly we rival the cold of a Canadian winter and how different is Alaska? I think it would be wiser to publish specs like that that are more like oil specs. Just put a temp range and specify service levels for that temp. It makes me wonder what Subaru's timeing belt spec is for Russia.
-
and I bought it because I could pay for it without financeing it. I have been fixing it up for the last year. It is a pretty good car now, much better than when I bought it. The real payoff with a car is the time you get without payments. Not to mention that insurance and license is really cheap the older it gets. If I had you car I would keep it for a few more years and if I was worried about it add an additional extended warranty. If you are earning tons of money go ahead and trade.
-
I can think of several places I might have used that over the years had I known about it. If he used locktite red on the crank and pulley also it might take the actual spinning load. One thing that might be interesting to measure is if the spinning has damaged the surface that locks the pulley. IE on some cranks the pulley sits against a lip. If that lip is too short the bolt can tighten but not actually put any pressure on the pulley so that the key is all that keeps it from turning. On other cars I have tightened the pulley and been able to rock it with my hand because of this. Needless to say I added a washer. I can't think what the Subaru piece looks like at the moment.
-
state motto is add more salt, the tool of choice was frequently the hot wrench. After I got here in Ca I was frequently assigned to be the guy with the torch due to my experience with corrosion. You can get out 30 year old salty exhaust studs by cherrying them with a torch and useing care. So I would say no to that. Heat can often save something that a tanker full of penetrating oil cannot. By the way once you get that rusty bolt out put a new one in. Or in this case new sensor
-
but the reason I did not was the seal. If the seal goes on first it could be tricky. If I recall the seal surface is on the pulley on a Subaru but I don't have one here to look at. Welding it is a pretty final step while getting an oversize key from the hardware store and getting out your file allows for more error. Cleaning the excess weld off with a grinder would be a pain too. On old British motorcycles we used to make offset keys to get the crank timing precise, and you can make a lot of keys to get something just right at little cost.
-
spot weld it. I had this issue on my Mercedes after it spun from the last mechanic not tightening it fully. I had metal transfered from the pulley to the crank. and some spots on the crank a bit low. Don't try this at home kids but I fixed it by pulling the radiator, shroud, fan, etc, and running the engine to turn the crank for short periods. I started by applying a file to the crank to round it roughly, then smoothed it with emery paper till I brought it into specs measured with a micrometer. I had to make a custom key twice as wide as stock on the crank side, and narrowed to stock size on the damper side. Then I cleaned the entire area with ether and applied red locktite. I torqued thing down to specs with a new bolt. I sold the car about 30,000 miles and a couple of years later and it still seemd fine.
-
Dohc Ej22???
cookie replied to GLCraig's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
this unless someone has done it before and you can get all the specs. I have done a number of head swaps, mostly Chevy and Ford, and even when you have a pretty good idea of results unexpected things crop up.