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ACEofsnett posted:In the midst of dual engine discussion, this really isn't getting enough love. Simply amazing. Was it an aftermarket timing belt? If it was a big name manufacturer, you should submit this to them as a testimonial. It was a Gates timing belt, Gates seems to have the best reliability and least failures, at least for the TDIs. I may send them the picture, that timing belt hung on for dear life and saved my little 1.9l Turbodiesel.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 15:25 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 00:08 |
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CommieGIR posted:It was a Gates timing belt, Gates seems to have the best reliability and least failures, at least for the TDIs. Truly it was the best mode of horrible mechanical failure. It pulled a Casey Jones for you.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 21:07 |
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I too have had a harmonic balancer separate. Makes for a weird noise.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 22:26 |
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It's more embarrassing when it happens at the drag-strip on your burnout The outer ring rolled down the track, and I imagined it was saying "I just want to be free".
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 22:46 |
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CommieGIR posted:It was a Gates timing belt, Gates seems to have the best reliability and least failures, at least for the TDIs. Any pictures of the car otherwise? I'm intrigued by a $600 TDI.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 23:08 |
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Sponge! posted:Truly it was the best mode of horrible mechanical failure. It pulled a Casey Jones for you. It was, but at 12:30AM on the 75 South, all you can think is "drat it, there goes my valves." Thankfully, the next day after ripping out all the shreds of timing belt and timing belt cover, and putting my spare timing belt on (also Gates) and cranking it for 30 seconds, she fired up just like normal. BlackMK4 posted:Any pictures of the car otherwise? I'm intrigued by a $600 TDI. I bought it for $600, had a siezed engine (#2 cylinder hydrolocked on oil, bad piston rings) Towed it home from Denver, tored apart the engine and put in new piston rings and connecting rod, started like nothing ever happened. Has a bad intake valve, so at idle it lopes, but at speed it moves quickly, especially now that I've put in Euro spec injectors. I'll get more pictures later, I had a rebuild thread in the forums somewhere. Devyl posted:It's more embarrassing when it happens at the drag-strip on your burnout The outer ring rolled down the track, and I imagined it was saying "I just want to be free". More like "I'm outa here, losers!" CommieGIR fucked around with this message at 23:27 on Jul 20, 2012 |
# ? Jul 20, 2012 23:10 |
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Last week a lady came into our shop, bought an alternator and her friend put it on away from our shop. Several days later she came back and demanded a replacement, because that one had stopped charging. Ok, no big deal, failures happen, we gave her a warranty replacement and she went on her way and had the same dude install it. She showed up today saying that this one had failed too. Our service manager thought this sounded fishy had her leave the car and was going to have me pull the replacement replacement alternator and test it, but I got as fat as loosening it before I realized that the belt looked like this: I put on a new belt and lo and behold, the alternator works. Just for shits, we threw her returned alternator on the test stand, and it worked perfectly too. Protip: If you have your shadetree mechanic friends work on your car...don't expect poo poo to work properly all the time, especially if they're imcompetent.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 01:08 |
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Lord Gaga posted:A bearing in the tube lock up or was it a control arm twisting it? I've no idea, I'll ask dad when I get the chance. All I recall is that it let go as she was driving along and dad had to go pick everything up. Amusingly, it was as she was taking the car to go get a new interior upholstered.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 01:36 |
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stevobob posted:Last week a lady came into our shop, bought an alternator and her friend put it on away from our shop. Several days later she came back and demanded a replacement, because that one had stopped charging. Ok, no big deal, failures happen, we gave her a warranty replacement and she went on her way and had the same dude install it. She showed up today saying that this one had failed too. Our service manager thought this sounded fishy had her leave the car and was going to have me pull the replacement replacement alternator and test it, but I got as fat as loosening it before I realized that the belt looked like this: The real question is did her ORIGINAL alternator work fine too? Did she return it for core credit? Do you still... have it? If so you should totally test it.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 01:48 |
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Sponge! posted:The real question is did her ORIGINAL alternator work fine too? Did she return it for core credit? Do you still... have it? If so you should totally test it. We don't have her original unfortunately, she just bought the first one over the counter and inexplicably kept the core. I'm willing to bet that it'd test good too, though.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 01:50 |
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stevobob posted:We don't have her original unfortunately, she just bought the first one over the counter and inexplicably kept the core. I'm willing to bet that it'd test good too, though. Her shady-trees mechanic probably got core value on it at a rebuild shop. That'd be my guess!
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 01:52 |
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What kind of dumbass mechanic doesn't do the belt at the same time as the alternator?
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 02:36 |
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thelightguy posted:What kind of dumbass mechanic doesn't do the belt at the same time as the alternator? I can explain that. The alternator belt was the inner belt and getting the outer belt that powers the PS pump and AC compressor off was a bit of a pain in the dick. So...that's how. He definitely noticed the haggard-rear end belt, figured it would work anyway and blamed us when it didn't.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 02:38 |
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stevobob posted:I can explain that. The alternator belt was the inner belt and getting the outer belt that powers the PS pump and AC compressor off was a bit of a pain in the dick. So...that's how. He definitely noticed the haggard-rear end belt, figured it would work anyway and blamed us when it didn't. But he had to remove the belt to do the alternator
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 06:31 |
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EightBit posted:But he had to remove the belt to do the alternator But you don't need to take all the other belts off and take it completely off. If the belt doesn't need to be replaced (or you're lazy), you can just leave the alternator belt flopping around on the pulley, then pull it back on when you're done.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 07:06 |
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Space Gopher posted:If the belt doesn't need to be replaced I do not understand these words in this order.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 07:55 |
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Space Gopher posted:If the belt
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 08:44 |
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This guy just friended me on facebook so he could ask some questions about the CB125 he's rebuilding... Yeah I'd say you'll probably need a new one of those.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 18:34 |
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GnarlyCharlie4u posted:This guy just friended me on facebook so he could ask some questions about the CB125 he's rebuilding... How the HELL did it get that ground down?
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 18:38 |
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throw some ZDDP additive in the oil and it'll be fine
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 18:53 |
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That's one hell of a custom grind.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 19:05 |
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GnarlyCharlie4u posted:This guy just friended me on facebook so he could ask some questions about the CB125 he's rebuilding... I actually had to double-take. It was like a trick question, except the correct answer was really, really obvious.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 19:12 |
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CommieGIR posted:How the HELL did it get that ground down? no loving clue. the rocker arms even look fine.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 20:11 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vjE-wHsjZ_E A video but... glorious nonetheless.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 21:12 |
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Vivec posted:A video but... glorious nonetheless. It's so pathetic it could only be diminished by any further drama, I mean any explosion would actually detract at this point.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 22:19 |
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This one's a new one on me.
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# ? Jul 22, 2012 05:16 |
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Is that a lizard? If so, my question is not "How did that get into the brakes of that car?" but "Why is something like that living in Seattle?"
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# ? Jul 22, 2012 05:18 |
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How did it smell?
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# ? Jul 22, 2012 05:29 |
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Probably like chicken. Everything smells like chicken.
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# ? Jul 22, 2012 05:32 |
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Well, there goes everyone's cheap insurance.
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# ? Jul 22, 2012 05:37 |
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I save well over 15% with USAA, so who cares
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# ? Jul 22, 2012 05:45 |
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I bet your thriftiness drives all the ladies wild.
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# ? Jul 22, 2012 05:48 |
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Vivec posted:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vjE-wHsjZ_E The redneck that was supposed to torque the bolts down didn't realize that the book said 200lbs not 20.0
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# ? Jul 24, 2012 02:36 |
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Haha you think the average Camaro builder knows what a torque spec is. Most of the ones use the German specification of Guten-Teit.
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# ? Jul 24, 2012 05:36 |
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Dr 14 INCH DICK Md posted:This one's a new one on me. I had one of those little bastards hop into my central A/C start capacitor. $250 dollars later I had coolness again...
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# ? Jul 24, 2012 18:42 |
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A clogged recirc filter wasn't allowing enough airflow through my a/c evaporator. just one massive block of ice. good to know the a/c system is still working well though
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# ? Jul 24, 2012 18:50 |
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Wow, I thought most AC systems had an evap temp sensor to prevent that very thing.
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# ? Jul 24, 2012 20:28 |
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Doctor Londom posted:Wow, I thought most AC systems had an evap temp sensor to prevent that very thing. Very few have them, mostly because it's yet another part to install and warranty coupled with the fact that this type of thing rarely happens unless you have low refrigerant like Powershift undoubtedly has. The evaporator has no business being below 0C in a properly functioning AC circuit.
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# ? Jul 24, 2012 20:39 |
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Motronic posted:Very few have them, mostly because it's yet another part to install and warranty coupled with the fact that this type of thing rarely happens unless you have low refrigerant like Powershift undoubtedly has. Yeah, ONLY IF IT USES AN ORIFICE TUBE. Those of us with proper expansion valve systems enjoy dipping way below freezing then cycling off.
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# ? Jul 24, 2012 22:01 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 00:08 |
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Sponge! posted:Yeah, ONLY IF IT USES AN ORIFICE TUBE. Those of us with proper expansion valve systems enjoy dipping way below freezing then cycling off. The big benefit of an expansion valve as a phase change device is that the window of acceptable feed pressures (therefore refrigerant charges and compressor health) is much wider than a (fixed) capillary tube due to the fact that the expansion valve adjusts based on the temperature of the refrigerant leaving the evaporator to prevent it from dropping below freezing as well as making it more efficient when it does have sufficient charge. It in no way allows you to cheat physics and humidity by running the evaporator below freezing. I froze the poo poo out of the one in my Porsche last year after an AC repair when I was impatiently refilling the system too quickly on a 100 degree 90+% humidity day.
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# ? Jul 24, 2012 23:04 |