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Zenki

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Posts posted by Zenki

  1.  evowrx said:
    11 hours makes sense if they pulled engine but why the **** would you. Quicker to pull rad and do timing in place.

    Only justifiable reason I can think of: if crank pulley bolt is sufficiently stubborn as to require application of a 3/4" drive impact wrench (have seen this once).

    Seeing as most workshops don't have the ability to evacuate A/C systems legally, I imagine they'd much prefer to pull motor instead.

  2. The system is self-bleeding to an extent like most Japanese cars. Following should suffice for you:

    - jack up front of vehicle (or park facing uphill)

    - fill system , leave cap off

    - turn heater on, hottest temp, minimum fan

    - leave engine to warm up

    - allow to cool

    - top up coolant if necessary, close cap

    Level in overflow bottle may drop after the first few drives, this is normal. If it doesn't stop dropping then you're losing coolant.

  3. Chiming in on adjustable suspension: If RIDE HEIGHT adjustable, requires cert. The alternative (adjustable dampers + aftermarket springs) requires some homework as you need to know your desired ride height in advance, but no cert required.

    It's probably not much cheaper that way, but it saves you from the hassle of having an LVV certification.

  4. If NZ New: ask for the engine code stamped on the VIN plate (tell them "it should go EJ2 something something" and most people should be able to find it)

    If JDM: ask for first three characters of chassis code and Google it

    As far as I'm aware the EJ25 head gasket issue is only on some earlier engines.

    The EJ204 vs EJ253 thing is mostly a matter of market demographics - JDM is more tolerant of engines that need to be revved as they are taxed based on engine capacity. Most other markets, no replacement for displacement.

  5.  Andy_Mac said:
    Also remember to keep some serious coin in the bank incase you do get in an accident. Wrote mine and another off when i was 17 and they wanted north of 1500 just for the excess. Managed to somehow get it knocked down to 1000, guy at the other end must've been having a real beaut of a day to consider that one. Still is hard to muster up that much at that age.

    Can confirm, my line of work involves fixing pranged cars and I see horrendous excesses on a rather frequent basis.

  6.  94 Leone said:
    Had to buy a new headlight thanks to random stones flicking up from behind trucks. Yay :/ 110+shipping from strongs. Hurrah for crystals

    Cheap!

    Continuing my pattern of working on Dairusire's RA more frequently than my own car;

    - replaced differential support outrigger bushings (clanking noise gone)

    - replaced brake fluid

    - rebalanced all four wheels

    - discovered that front wheels are bent :cool:

    My car:

    - drove it

    - put petrol in it (you know you're pushing it when the estimated range goes blank)

  7. Change oil regularly? Get one of these. (Lisle 63600) Paired with the right extensions and a 3/8" drive ratchet, it will get the spin-on oil filter off just about everything.

    fDucXjZ.jpg

    Like this thing; (Toyota JZ - depending on the particular car, ranges from "somewhat difficult" to "I wish I had smaller arms")

    oyjDUPR.jpg

    This thing: (Some Nissan SRs, especially in transverse FWD applications causing the filter to be stuffed into a weird space between the brake booster and strut tower - because Nissan)

    0PSmcDe.jpg

    Especially this thing: (NA EJ253, A.K.A "burning ring of fire")

    mXaDBPj.jpg

  8.  Sancho said:
    how important is lining up the timing belt marks during the timing belt change? Personally I've done it because the instructions said to, but other people are saying it doesn't matter....

    The marks are a safety net that you can "reset" the engine back to if you stuff up somehow - belt skips a tooth, accidentally turned a cam, etc etc. You can do a change without them as long as you know exactly how many degrees everything should be turned relative to everything else, but why make more work when Subaru's done it for you?

  9. Hi all, I realize there aren't that many CVT owners on these forums but maybe someone will find this useful.

    The Lineartronic CVT is "lifetime-fill". This is technically true; as of current date availability of spare Lineartronic CVTs is questionable at best, and I'm not sure if they require a specialized procedure to reprogram after installation. Therefore the lifetime of the car is probably the same as the lifetime of the CVT.

    I feel that it is best to replace the fluid as a preventative measure - at least that way, if it goes it's not because it wasn't maintained. Winger Subaru stocks and sells CVT fluid so they seem to agree with me.

    My fluid change was done at 137,000 km. Closer to 100,000 is probably safer. There is no official service interval, because "lifetime-fill".

    What you need:

    - 10mm hex bit*;

    - 8mm hex bit**;

    - CVT fluid, approx 5 to 6 litres***

    - replacement crush washer for CVT drain plug

    - replacement washer for CVT fill plug (optional - it's a solid washer so I didn't replace this);

    - pump/syringe/gun to inject new fluid - if it will fill a rear diff, it will fill the CVT.

    * fill/check plug, on rear end of transmission

    ** drain plug, bottom of transmission on black sump pan - do not confuse this with the large Torx plug, that is front differential

    *** Winger Subaru sells Motul Multi CVTF in 1 litre bottles. I bought 6 litres but only needed 5. As far as I am aware it is not possible to obtain genuine Subaru Lineartronic CVT fluid.

    Procedure:

    0.5) (optional but recommended) Warm up the CVT before draining, as this will take forever if you simply leave it idling.

    1) Lift the car. Vehicle must be level.

    2) Clean area around plugs - you do not want sand or grit in your CVT fluid.

    3) Undo fill plug. Leave in place.

    4) Remove drain plug, drain CVT. Between 4.5 to 5.5 litres will be drained, depending on CVT temperature. Discard crush washer.

    5) Reinstall drain plug with new crush washer.

    6) Remove fill plug and fill CVT. Done in the exact same manner as a differential - fluid is pumped in until it overflows through the fill/inspection port.

    7) Temporarily reinstall fill plug.

    8) Start car. Cycle through transmission positions.

    9) When warm, check CVT level with transmission in Park. Add more if required; torque fill plug.

    Notes: Motul CVTF cost me ~ $25 incl per litre, trade. The crush washer was ~$3. Don't be cheap and try to reuse it; it'll probably leak and it costs you less than a cup of coffee.

  10.  lachlan said:
    mine has 220 k so i figured its burnt all the oil it needs to lol.

    all of them are k24a . black "i vtec" on the plastic is 160 hp . only has cam phasing and lower comp . red "i v tec on the covers is 200 hp . real v tec as well as cam phasing . this is only the cheap model . actually keen to buy a 200 hp one one day

    Black 160ps ones also have cam-switching but they only switch down to an economy cam instead of up to a performance cam.

    K24A2 (red i-VTEC) is a very nice engine, also AFAIK much cheaper than certain Type R-sourced K20 variants so a fairly popular swap.

    Back on topic:

    Changed with Castrol Edge 5w-30 because the EJ253 doesn't seem to like ZIC XQFE 5w-30 very much. Also finally replaced the crush washer; I forgot if all EJs use the same drain plug and asked Winger Subaru, who says yes - order half dozen crush washers and voila, they don't fit. :mad:

    Also did rear diff, CVT, and air filter. Couldn't do front diff (someone lost the T70 bit years ago and it was never replaced because the only use for one is to drain Subaru front diffs). Managed to find some blue coolant, too.

    Just have to do accessory belts now, which I need to buy a stretch belt fitting tool for.

    U8oqlkwl.jpg

  11.  subaroo said:
    a worker at repco told me z436 doesnt have anti drain valve that can cause damage but in my head i was think wtf you only need a anti drain vavle if your filter is on top of the motor like euro cars bmw,vw etc...

    Pretty much this. Sure, it'll drain... straight back into the filter...

    AFAIK Z436 instead of Z495 is no problemo, meanwhile Z495 tends to not fit on Subies that spec Z436 because the outer casing is much wider.

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