Date: Tue, 12 Jul 94 23:53:28 ADT
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From: smitht@jupiter.sun.csd.unb.ca (Tim Smith)
Subject: Re: Odds and Sods, too long
Hi.. a voice from the mysterious east
Just caught up on my clogged newsreader, thought I'd get in my 2 cents worth
now.
1) CV Lore The star wrench for getting those pesky CVs out goes by
the trade name of Hazett, a 3/8" socket drive. If you can afford one BUY IT
NOW, this is not just the Cadillac of tools, it's a Rolls-Royce. I paid
$22Cdn for mine, ouch. The star teeth get shallower as the tool gets in
deeper, so the hardened edges will cut/wedge into beatup bolts way way
better than a regular Allen key. Cleaning the head of the bolts to let this
tool sink in is a must, as someone mentioned. The Hazett will remove Allen
headed bolts that are beat to death, just drive it firmly in. (I hate
Vise_grips or any similiar metal-eating knuckle-skinning imitations) If you
have really buggered the bolt heads pound them directly in with a large flat
faced punch. This moves some metal back into the center enough to let the
Hazett bite in again. This trick works sometimes for regular Allen keys
also. One single F**ked CV joint bolt can take 1/4 hour to tease out,
micro-turn at a time using vise grips, and you ain't going to do this on the
outboard Vanagon CV anyhow. What's your time worth? Pay the $$, it's nice to
start a job knowing that you're fully armed and dangerous. I've used
Craftsman Allen keys on a socket drive (big 3/4" drive handle with 3/8"
adapter to the socket) and they work well BUT they always wobble and slip if
you get crooked. The Hazett fits correctly, almost bonds to the bolt head
and won't wobble when seated well. Don't waste any money on a regular set of
Allens keys for this job alone, nice to have in the tool box though.
It seems to be the outboard joint that goes first, I've put this
down to road shock, each bump/pothole shakes off grease at that end, the
tranny CV gets a smoother ride. Cars driven around town seem to loose the
passenger side first, more cruddy road surface near the curb? Anyone else
noticed a trend? I was told to 'massage' the grease back into the joint from
the boot when it had cooled down, especially after long highway runs. Now ve
are getting intimate about our vantasies. Sorry, bad pun. Also told to use a
horse syringe to pump in grease, just shoot up your boots at the bottom of
the folds, haven't tried this one yet though.
2) Engine swaps After someone posted KEP phone # I got their
catalog. And the winner is..... a 2.2 litre Subaru Legacy motor, 130HP,
160HP turbo! It's a water cooled flat four 16 valve motor, 1990-94 year. I
noticed someone was looking for around 150 HP, here it is. This engine
requires raising the Vanagon deck lid about 3 inches, a liveable pain. All
Subaru motors seem suited, ie 1800cc Loyale motor @ ~90hp, 115 turbo, and it
_appears_ no deck lid changes! The Subaru dealer here "assured" me that
their motors are good for up to 150,000 miles. A couple of scarce Subarus
were 6cyl 2.7l@145HP and 3.3l 24v@230HP, wow! An amazing list of
conversions, staggering. Best V8 was an old Buick 1963!, found in... yup
Buicks, but also (as I remember) MGB-GT8, Morgan +8, Rover-3500, Triumph
TR-8 all old '70s cars, and in older Range-Rovers/ Land-Rovers. Parts hard
to get, lots of old British sports car clubs around though. The newer
Range-Rovers have the same motor upped to 3.9 litre, no mention though. Got
an annoying rich neighbour? Hmmm.. Pinto engines were NOT recommended due to
vibration of the inline 4 cyls. Their catalog is a good short source of
reading material. Happy dreams.
3) Bleeding the Rad Park on a reasonably steep hill, you need the front
bumper about 18" higher than the rear, NOT the other way 'round! Take off
the front upper grill, and remove the bleed screw. Now jam a piece of
plastic tubing into the screw hole, twist it in etc. and run the other end
into a 2litre Coke bottle, to the bottom. Balance the entire mess against
the windshield with the help of the wiper arm, string, spit whatever. Turn
all heater controls to HOT. With the parking brake FIRMLY on, put the car in
neutral and start the engine then walk to the back and now remove the
"radiator" cap. If you remove the cap first, then the front bleed screw your
vanagon will pee itself before you can start the motor, so be warned! Open
the rear cross bleed screw, a plastic knob. Revving the engine up will push
gungy brown/green coolant and many air bubbles into the coke bottle, whose
level you can observe by squinting through the front windshield. Add fresh
coolant as the level drops at the radiator cap. You can balance the revs to
let the coolant in the coke bottle be re-inhaled, minus bubbles. I cycle the
coolant level in the coke bottle up and down a few times, short high revs to
push out the air bubbles. Then, keeping the revs up, close the radiator cap
once the belching into the coke bottle stops. Close BOTH bleed screws. Let
it run for a while, then turn off, wait 5 minutes, start it up again and
removing the radiator cap, see if the coolant level drops significantly when
you rev it up. If so you've still got an air bubble in there, likely in the
heater core, do it all again and rev it higher! This is a relatively clean
way to do this job single handed. Don't waste time jacking the van up on
stands, go public and find a good spot, it takes 15-20 minutes, and you can
move along quickly if rousted by Gestapo. The antifreeze kills thirsty cats,
can get you fined for dumping etc. so the coke bottle works well, just cap
the gungy stuff and bury it in your back yard late at night.
4) Stainless steel brake lines The point of these beasts is to give
firmer pedal feel, the stainless steel braiding does that in part, but it is
the small bore Teflon tube lining the inside of the rubber hose that is the
real key. The teflon doesn't balloon out when you hit the brakes like your
regular all rubber hoses, this is prevented by the teflon tube AND the
stainless braid. Why stainless? Plain steel braid wires that fine would rust
flex/crack and disappear damned fast letting the teflon balloon
(irreversibly) until it popped. Unlike rubber, the teflon won't recover
after stretching a lot. The teflon inner diameter is about the same as the
rest of the hard steel lines, for 'compatibility', which I suspect is a
bogus claim. Would I buy them?, why not? they can't be worse, might even
prevent that rubber swelling close-off problem also mentioned. I've got to
replace all 4 lines on an old Porsche, <$10.00 total difference, so I'm
going stainless.
and finally 5) 2 Westies for sale in my area, classified adds, local paper,
population 60,000 etc. (read: ~boonies)
1988 loaded, air $15,000Cdn ($1.00 US = $1.40 Cdn)
1990 loaded, auto, air $20,900Cdn
or best offer (no mileage given for either)
I haven't called/seen these two but if someone is slightly serious I could
do so, calling is obviously no problem. They're both out of my price range,
sigh. I don't know about cross-border shopping USA/Canada, free-trade is
only a concept on my side of the line. I would pay customs duty, 8%,
provincial tax 11%, GST 7%, coming up this way, going west? Remember this is
Fredericton, New Brunswick, 3hrs east from Bangor Maine (am I getting
warm?), 9-10hrs. to Boston (did that help?). Email direct if you want the
phone numbers, more info etc., I forgot to bring in the ad. sorry
and.... sorry for the long posting tjs
ps: --> Joel, could you buy an answering machine, then I could just dictate
it for your nimble fingers to transcribe, my binary typeing mode (1 finger
ON/OFF) leaves something to be desired in speed. Thanks for your tech note
on 60% antifreeze mixture warning by the way!
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