|
If a PO installs a catback exhaust (in this case, an Espelir GT500), do I have anything to worry about if I remove it and replace the standard part before running the car? I was under the impression that removing the cats was the cause of boost creep/engine destruction, and so a length of pipe after the cat shouldn't cause wacky exhaust hijinx. e: Also, a new mod to look out for: aftermarket sunroofs. One WRX PO actually paid someone to get up on top of her car and cut a hole in the roof and wedge in a sunroof. I don't think it'd damage structural rigidity that much, but the thought of the rust from potential water leaks made me turn it down. Seat Safety Switch fucked around with this message at 21:58 on Oct 27, 2009 |
# ? Oct 27, 2009 21:25 |
|
|
# ? May 21, 2024 16:21 |
|
I'm also wondering if it may be worth my while to get a new axle nut and re-torque the sucker. At the very least I'm going to check it make sure it hasn't jump the strake or loosened up at all.
|
# ? Oct 27, 2009 21:53 |
|
ab0z posted:Why would you have to replace the hub if the bearing is bad? you might not have to, but if the hub has any wear or scoring on it, the new bearing will be toast very quickly.
|
# ? Oct 27, 2009 22:44 |
|
jamal posted:you might not have to, but if the hub has any wear or scoring on it, the new bearing will be toast very quickly. Isn't there a race on both sides of the actual bearings, that's removed and replaced when doing the bearings? It looks like the bearings don't actually touch the hub. Am I reading this wrong? edit: (1) Baffle plate (SFJ) (2) Spring pin (3) Outer race (SFJ) (4) Snap ring (5) Trunnion (6) Free ring (7) Circlip (8) Boot band (9) Boot (SFJ) (10) Boot (EBJ) (11) EBJASSY (12) Tone wheel (With ABS) (13) Baffle plate (14) Oil seal (IN) (15) Snap ring (16) Bearing (17) Housing (18) Oil seal (OUT) (19) Hub bolt (20) Hub (21) Axle nut ab0z fucked around with this message at 04:29 on Oct 28, 2009 |
# ? Oct 28, 2009 04:27 |
|
Was looking for a Subaru for some fun weekend driving, Autocross and mountain trips; the 2 wheel drive S-10 just won't cut it for snowboard season. Came across this gem relatively close to me. I really like the coupe body style but don't exactly trust a swap like this. Should I steer clear or investigate. If so what questions should I ask and do I only trust it if a shop has done the work? How does the swap then affect the pricing? Any particular things I should look for?
|
# ? Oct 28, 2009 05:05 |
|
ab0z posted:It looks like the bearings don't actually touch the hub. Am I reading this wrong? Well, the theory is that the inner race that is pressed onto the hub seizes partially and starts galling the surface of the hub itself. The axle fits into the inner splines of the hub, and the bearings resides on the oustide of the splined shaft on it, with a small gap in order to torque up the bearings so it won't fall apart the moment it gets some lateral force.
|
# ? Oct 28, 2009 09:54 |
|
sl0hburn posted:Was looking for a Subaru for some fun weekend driving, Autocross and mountain trips; the 2 wheel drive S-10 just won't cut it for snowboard season. Came across this gem relatively close to me. No way would I want to have anything to do with that. looking for a swapped car, here are some things to check: -done in a carb-legal way (in CA) -all the instruments work. it's pretty common for things like the coolant temp and the idiot lights, cel, etc, to not work -common for windows and hvac stuff not to work anyway, to do it right, you basically take the ecu, and the harness from the ecu, and splice it into everywhere it supposed to go on the rs. on top of that, there's stuff that is different or you have to add, like a fuel pump controller. When I think of more stuff about swaps I'll add it. I've always wanted to do one.
|
# ? Oct 28, 2009 10:40 |
|
Baby Hitler posted:Well, the theory is that the inner race that is pressed onto the hub seizes partially and starts galling the surface of the hub itself. The axle fits into the inner splines of the hub, and the bearings resides on the oustide of the splined shaft on it, with a small gap in order to torque up the bearings so it won't fall apart the moment it gets some lateral force. Ok I get what you're saying. sorry, I had a long day yesterday.
|
# ? Oct 28, 2009 14:55 |
|
jamal posted:Swapped RS I asked a few questions of the seller and this is what he responded with. I did not edit this in the slightest: Seller posted:all the gauges work, the swap was done by my friends its called jdm garage. and the only thing with it was it needs to be tuned. everything is perfect after the swap i parked it because i basically blew all my money... the chassis has 190k and the motor swap has 60k The car is posted in Oxnard, Ca so if any SoCal goons know JDM Garage let me know. I am new to the area.
|
# ? Oct 28, 2009 22:16 |
|
That is a retarded number of miles for an STI-swapped 2.5RS - there are quite a few Canadian examples going for less than that because of our surplus of imported motors that were formerly inside Japanese market STIs. I've posted a bunch in here about swaps because I kind of wanted to do my own Gravel Express in my backyard, but there's so many places it can go wrong if it's not done professionally in a shop with competent people. Here is some guy's record of doing his own 2.5RS swap. Google isn't turning anything up for JDM Garage that I can see. It probably couldn't hurt to go take a look at the car. Ask him what he thinks needs to be tuned - if he used the stock STI ECU with stock parts, there probably isn't a lot of stuff to worry about. It looks like he set up a standalone ECU and then went nuts with bolt-ons - there could be some serious mechanical concerns to go with the age of the car. There's also a lot of pretty ricey mods on that thing: blow-off valves always seem to flip my bozo bit on Subaru builds. Where did that STI motor come from? Was it a crate engine, or was it a halfcut from a rollover? Was it inspected properly before they jammed it into the chassis? That chassis has some remarkably high miles, even if the engine is solid. If it helps, the naturally aspirated 2.5RSes generally do better in rallycross here than turbocharged cars. I would look at buying one of those, or live with four doors and get a (slightly) unmolested bugeye WRX. I'd say test-drive it, but definitely go in with a suspicious attitude. e: On top of that, like jamal mentioned, you live in CA and have to pass a smog inspection. With a stock STI motor and friends you might pass as an STI, but that assumes all the emissions stuff was swapped over properly. Not sure what the specific requirements of CARB are, so maybe you could define it as an engine-swap legally somehow and just have to swap out the CARB-illegal parts. Seat Safety Switch fucked around with this message at 22:40 on Oct 28, 2009 |
# ? Oct 28, 2009 22:31 |
|
Seat Safety Switch posted:If it helps, the naturally aspirated 2.5RSes generally do better in rallycross here than turbocharged cars. I'm sure that's to do with better drivers than car capability.
|
# ? Oct 28, 2009 22:49 |
|
Well I broke my clutch fork pivot shaft hole....Some days I hate knowing about cars because it means if I send it to a shop I'm just being lazy. Here's the area where it broke:
|
# ? Oct 29, 2009 21:49 |
|
kimbo305 posted:I'm sure that's to do with better drivers than car capability.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2009 15:21 |
|
I have a 05 9-2x and I really need some new tires. At some point last year there was a consensus tire I feel like but I can't remember what it was. I have the alloy wheels, I drive 2 downtown city miles to work everyday and a lot of highway miles but I don't do racing, autocross, or anything. I do ball out on gravel and mountain trails sometimes. What tires should I be looking at?
|
# ? Oct 30, 2009 18:53 |
|
Bridgestone Potenza RE960as should be perfect.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2009 21:35 |
|
Wrar posted:A regular 2.0 turbo is a bit of a pain in the rear end in a rallycross. It's difficult to keep the car in boost. Between that and the fact that the 2.5 weighs around 300 pounds less and is slightly smaller. I can't imagine the 300lbs makes up for the power difference. Maybe it is nimbler. But yeah with some judicious shifting into tighter corners you should be able to keep revs into the 4000s. Not that I can talk; I stalled 3 times on my first runs out.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2009 21:38 |
|
bull3964 posted:Bridgestone Potenza RE960as should be perfect. I just got these for my WRX last month, based on them being the overwhelming consensus here and elsewhere, and they're outstanding.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2009 21:43 |
|
Update on oil leak: The dealer guys at Carriage Subaru in Temecula, California are a bunch of idiot fucks. They didn't see the original factory crush washer, and just put another washer on top of it and said voilá, complete. Oil change! Also I don't trust anybody named 'Big _____' anymore, at all. On a side note, does anybody know how common failures of the WRX viscous coupling occur? I was in there for an hour, and a 50 year old dude with an 08 WRX had some serious problems – 1 wheel wasn't getting power in his AWD system, and his transmission apparently had poo poo itself in 3rd gear – and all this at 25k miles.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2009 22:18 |
|
Just Another XY posted:Update on oil leak: The dealer guys at Carriage Subaru in Temecula, California are a bunch of idiot fucks. They didn't see the original factory crush washer, and just put another washer on top of it and said voilá, complete. Oil change! To be completely fair to the techs, Subaru paints the drat crush washer with the bolt and torques it to an ungodly amount of torque from the factory. What results is a pancake thin crush washer that is the same color as the bolt, making it nearly invisible.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2009 22:53 |
|
kimbo305 posted:I can't imagine the 300lbs makes up for the power difference. Maybe it is nimbler. But yeah with some judicious shifting into tighter corners you should be able to keep revs into the 4000s. Not that I can talk; I stalled 3 times on my first runs out. The ONLY Subaru to ever beat me on dirt is an RS 2.5 (and I have never beaten it, despite my best efforts). The throttle response and lack of weight really do make a huge difference - they are very nimble, the 2.5 gives you a handy amount of power, the AWD is 50:50 - which is actually better than the 35:65 or 41:59 of the STI on dirt. And better weight balance, the 20+ kgs less over the nose does make a difference. An RS 2.5 really is a drat good thing.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2009 23:02 |
|
Cat Terrist posted:An RS 2.5 really is a drat good thing. I want one so bad. The closest one is that $5000 I posted ealier.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2009 02:20 |
|
bull3964 posted:Bridgestone Potenza RE960as should be perfect.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2009 16:38 |
|
At the behest of my brother, I took my WRX out on some dirt roads today. I suggest anybody who hasn't done so do so immediately. I giggled like a little schoolgirl as my car fishtailed wildly and then took a corner at speed. I felt like Colin McRae's long lost brother.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 05:38 |
|
BannedForLulz posted:To be completely fair to the techs, Subaru paints the drat crush washer with the bolt and torques it to an ungodly amount of torque from the factory. What results is a pancake thin crush washer that is the same color as the bolt, making it nearly invisible. That would be fair to someone not familiar with Subarus, but he took it to a dealer for christs sakes. It's not like they've never done them before.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 06:09 |
|
Just Another XY posted:At the behest of my brother, I took my WRX out on some dirt roads today. I suggest anybody who hasn't done so do so immediately. I giggled like a little schoolgirl as my car fishtailed wildly and then took a corner at speed. Yesterday I went out with a friend in his RS with gravels, agx's, big rear sway, and skids all around. We drove over 220+ miles of all dirt and saw all sorts of cool forest nature poo poo. These cars are built for it. At one point we met up with a friend who was in a civic with street tires, my friend ended up gettin in his car to show him some techniques so I got to follow them in the RS. I was smiling from ear to ear after driving that thing. I'll be ordering a skid plate for my car this week.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 15:47 |
|
Can anyone recommend a good place to buy flannel shirts from? We just got a 2010 outback.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 20:02 |
|
Don Lapre posted:Can anyone recommend a good place to buy flannel shirts from? We just got a 2010 outback. Oh man, they didn't tell you? There is a free flannel and golden retriever puppy under the hatch mat by the spare tire.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 20:19 |
|
8ender posted:Oh man, they didn't tell you? There is a free flannel and golden retriever puppy under the hatch mat by the spare tire. we've had the car a couple of weeks now, i hope hes ok
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 20:20 |
|
Slow is Fast posted:Yesterday I went out with a friend in his RS with gravels, agx's, big rear sway, and skids all around. We drove over 220+ miles of all dirt and saw all sorts of cool forest nature poo poo. These cars are built for it. At one point we met up with a friend who was in a civic with street tires, my friend ended up gettin in his car to show him some techniques so I got to follow them in the RS. I was smiling from ear to ear after driving that thing. Out of curiosity, the off-road bug definitely hit me, and I was wondering if people had advice for equipping my wrx for weekend fun use. No rallycross, just running around a bit on roads less-paved.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 20:39 |
|
Just Another XY posted:Out of curiosity, the off-road bug definitely hit me, and I was wondering if people had advice for equipping my wrx for weekend fun use. No rallycross, just running around a bit on roads less-paved. Skid plate to protect your go fast motor stuff. Mud flaps to keep some paint on the side of your car. For tires, I'm going to be using my snows because it's getting to cold so not worth gravels. I'll be picking up a used set of gravels in the spring probably. Poke around on the dirty impreza forums, the rallycross prep threads have info on skids and mudflaps.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 21:02 |
|
Make sure your spare is in good shape, bring a 1 foot square plywood board to stabilize your emergency jack, should you need to use it. Maybe buy a tow strap.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 21:13 |
|
kimbo305 posted:Maybe buy a tow strap.
|
# ? Nov 2, 2009 21:19 |
|
Are there any serious differences between the Saab 9-2X Aero and the WRX wagon? As far as I can tell, only the front clip is different - but do those differences impede into the engine bay and prevent certain modifications, or is it just different sheet metal?
|
# ? Nov 3, 2009 04:19 |
|
Seat Safety Switch posted:Are there any serious differences between the Saab 9-2X Aero and the WRX wagon? As far as I can tell, only the front clip is different - but do those differences impede into the engine bay and prevent certain modifications, or is it just different sheet metal? Just sheet metal. 9-2x iirc has HIDs, and the STi steering rack. I think everything else is WRX.
|
# ? Nov 3, 2009 06:22 |
|
My new $650 daily driver, For some reason* it's not running right. It needs a lot of little things before it's drivable. Most of the rubber bits are dry-rotted, dash lights don't work, blower motor barely works, and it leaks oil. The plan is to build up an ea81 and swap that plus a dual range gearbox next spring/summer. I might do a thread at that time. I need to get rid of the camo ASAP. Suggest a color, original was silver/gray. *points
|
# ? Nov 3, 2009 07:08 |
|
oxbrain posted:My new $650 daily driver, Wow, I can't imagine finding anything so awesome for $650. Good luck with the rubber bits though, they're whats keeping me from getting anywhere on my First Project Ever.
|
# ? Nov 3, 2009 07:16 |
|
It's camo, was on the wrong side of the state, and had a very minimal listing. I was expecting it to be all beat up and barely running. Instead it's cleanish, low mileage, and has the weber 32/36 swap already done. I'm already running into parts problems. 3 day wait for the CV boots, 4 day wait for a chiltons manual, 2 day wait for a lower horsecock, 3 day wait for wheel studs for a 6-lug conversion, it goes on and on. A lot of bushings just can't be found, like the mustache bar bushings. I might wind up casting my own poly bushings for those. Oh, and nobody makes struts/shocks for it?
|
# ? Nov 3, 2009 07:43 |
|
Tremblay posted:Just sheet metal. 9-2x iirc has HIDs, and the STi steering rack. I think everything else is WRX. The 9-2x also has different suspension tuning (softer springs and stiffer dampers I think), different seats (in the front at least), and different wheels. For a list of all of the differences check out this thread http://saab92x.com/viewtopic.php?id=406 . Mechanically it's all WRX and WRX mods will work. I had a gutted uppipe, downpipe, and accessport stage 2 loaded on mine before I sold it.
|
# ? Nov 3, 2009 17:28 |
|
loving gently caress I think I destroyed a wheel bearing last night, and I have until tomorrow to fix it. I hope that outback is still at the junkyard so I can pull the upright. That'll learn me to jump my car.
|
# ? Nov 3, 2009 21:49 |
|
|
# ? May 21, 2024 16:21 |
|
jamal posted:loving gently caress I think I destroyed a wheel bearing last night, and I have until tomorrow to fix it. I hope that outback is still at the junkyard so I can pull the upright.
|
# ? Nov 3, 2009 22:55 |