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soobyfan

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Posts posted by soobyfan

  1. Here's the tooth count if you havn't seen it:

     

    There should be 44 teeth between the mark on the crank sprocket and the mark on the pass. side cam pulley. There should be 40.5 teeth between the mark on the crank sprocket and the mark on the drivers side cam pulley.

     

    I recently did a timing belt on a '96 EJ2.2, I bought the belt from a Subaru dealer and it was a Unitta brand, it has yellow marks on it and it lined up perfectly. However, as others have pointed out the tooth count between the sprockets is what matters.

  2. I have a 96 2.2L & used the ebay kit as well. I am happy with it but I opted to not use the t-belt that came with the kit and bought an OEM belt, about $46.00 after discount.

     

    I elected to go with the aftermarket water pump, however a lot of people say use OEM only, probably wise on an interference engine like yours.

     

    I also replaced all hoses, t-stat, cap, due to the reputation of these engines to overheat. Be careful when filling the coolant to make sure there are no air pockets, search this site for procedure.

     

    I elected to re-use the tensioner, just follow the procedure carefully for testing and compressing. It's not hard just be careful.

     

    I went with OEM on the seals and gaskets, there are some dealers that will discount their prices. I did a bunch of research on the net and then called a local dealer and they were willing to match the "internet" price. I have found they will go about 25% off.

  3. I just completed a t-belt change on a '96 OBW 2.2L, I has similar results:

     

    I also used the pulley set from TheImportExperts, but I did not trust the tbelt, I bought an OEM belt.

     

    Before I took the old belt off I very carefully noted the position of the marks on the cam pulleys and the driveshaft sprocket and the reference marks on the belt. The driveshaft sprocket was 1/2 tooth off. (this was a Contitech belt). When I installed the new OEM belt (Unitta) it lines up much better. I have read quite a few reports of people having trouble getting everything to line up perfectly.

     

    I had no trouble at all getting the bolt off the belt pulley, I have a 5sp, so I put it in gear and put on the hand brake, sprayed it with penetrant, and it came right off. (1/2 in breaker bar and pipe extender helps a lot). I torqued it to 120 ft/lbs when reassembling, no reason to take chances with something that can cause so much trouble.

     

    I also replaced the radiator hoses, water pump bypass hose, t-stat, radiator cap, water pump, cam oil seals, main oil seals, rocker cover gaskets.

  4. I am not convinced that an OEM pump is different than an aftermarket pump. Subaru buys the pumps from several different suppliers, I suspect they are built to the same specs as the aftermarket pumps. I would be interested in hearing if anyone has any additional information.

     

    ATSUGI, Parat and NWP make cast impeller style pumps and GMB makes a stamped impeller style pump.

     

    I have done some research on idler pulleys and the situation is very similar. You buy "OEM" idlers from the dealer, but in fact they are made by GMB, NSH, etc. Same exact part.

  5. When I changed the bulbs in my heater control unit I used generic 7219 bulbs that I purchased from a local electronics supply store. Usually sold in qty of 10.

     

    You will need to carefully remove the colored "condom" from the old bulb and install on the new one. I messed up the first one I did, the technique that worked for me is to kind of roll it off the original and back on the replacement bulb. The generic bulbs come with leads that are much longer than needed, just cut to match the length of the originals.

     

    The nominal voltage supplied is 9.5V, the 7219 is rated for 12V, in theory the 7219 bulb should last longer than the original, but will be slightly dimmer. My replacements have been working fine for about 2 years now, they seem to be plenty bright to illuminate the controls at night.

  6. I saw this thread from way back, any luck on replacing just the bearings in the idler pulleys?

     

    My cogged idler (NSK) has 2 ea NSK 6005DWA sealed bearings

     

    One smooth idler (NSK) has 1 ea NSK 6006DU2 sealed bearing

     

    The other smooth idler is a Koyo, the number is DDG1060ARDIH, and it appears it will not press apart. It is the newer wide bearing style smooth idler.

     

    I have a question for those knowledgeable on bearings. I have found cross references for the NSK bearings, but no direct match for those ending in DU2. Is a -DDU a suitable replacement, also there is a -2RS that may be readily available.

     

    Do the OEM's put in special grease or are these garden variety bearings?

  7. 96 was the first year for the real outback, and the only year the 2.2 was available in the outback, it only came with the 5 sp manual transmission.

     

    Outbacks with lots of miles may need struts, cv boots, clutches, the fuel guage is very inaccurate, the heater control almost always has burned out lamps, etc, etc. This is pretty normal stuff for a car with lots of miles.

     

    The 2.2 is much better in terms of reliability than the 2.5, do a search on head gaskets on this web site, you will see for yourself.

  8. I have a '96 OBW, 2.2L, 5SP MT.

     

    My symptoms are: The charge light came on, the brake light came on. I got the car home, charged the battery with an external charger, then started it back up to do some checks with a volt meter. I read 12.0V with the engine running and 12.4V with it turned off. This sure looks like an alternator that is dead, are there any other things that could cause this? I also checked the lugs at the battery, cleaned and tightened, so I am getting reasonably good contact right at the battery.

     

    Thanks in advance.

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