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Zed Head

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Everything posted by Zed Head

  1. I've pondered just building some fixtures that mimic the shape at the top of the factory scissor jack and using the scissor jack lift points on the rocker panel of the car. Basically a piece of square tube with a slot cut in it. Easy to get to and under what should be one of the strongest structures of the body.
  2. So far I've been ignored but what the hell... Eddy67 is looking to find the head that will give him a performance boost over the stock E31. Seems like the bigger valves of the N47 should provide more flow, giving more potential. Whether or not the rest of the parts can realize that potential is unknown. The carbs would need some work, I assume. The cams are similar, if not the same grind. The round ports will be dumping in to square exhaust ports, so should be okay. But, the important question of valves hitting the edges of the cylinder seems to be in play. If he can avoid or fix that problem, and is ready to retune his carbs, then the N47 seems like the way to go. BUT, it seems that the round N47 ports might be larger than the square exhaust manifold ports of the manifold used with the E31 head. Another thing to fix. Carbs on N47 - Nissan : Datsun ZCar forum :Nissan Z Forum: 240Z to 370Z Everything still leads back to just using the bronze valve head. It's not going to die in 2500 miles.
  3. Isolate problem to smaller area > unplug pump, press button. : if fuse blows then problem is not on the pump side of the plug : if fuse does not blow then problem is on pump side of plug.
  4. He's calling himself "slammsun". He'll probably put "Heelys" on his crossmember...
  5. You can tell things are slow when you're trying to convert a guy who just wants to replace his excellent shape valve seats for something more durable in to a race engine owner. Not that there's anything wrong with that. He could probably run the bronze seats for 20k - 30k miles while he works on the other head.
  6. His resistance numbers imply that he has a Pertronix electronic ignition. When electronic ignition modules start to go bad they can generate electrical noise that the tachometer will see as an RPM signal. He probably hasn't come back because his engine stopped running.
  7. I'm going to guess that somebody removed yours. The block would be mounted using those two bolt holes, but with longer bolts. A sandwich. To remove it you'd just use shorter bolts. The block is ugly and a real pain to get the coolant lines connected, and is a potential leak source. Not a big deal if the power to the internal heater still works. It does take about 40 seconds or more to fully close the valve using just electrical power though. You can pinch either one of those hoses shut to see if it's the valve staying open that causes the high idle, as siteunseen suggested. If the hoses are old though, they might split. Then you'll get a really high idle that never drops. On the BCDD - it lets air past the throttle blade like the AAR does. Whether it would cause a high idle at start would depend on if the passage is normally open (closed by engine vacuum or the solenoid) or normally closed (opened by the solenoid or vacuum). You'd have to study the Emissions chapter to know.
  8. Maybe Black Dragon will sell one part of the set - Datsun 240Z, 260Z, 280Z, 280ZX & Mazda RX7 iCatalog - Black Dragon Auto
  9. Z cars are notorious for poor idle voltage. I would run the bigger pulley if you can. But the timing chain cover on the L24 engine that you're going to use is probably set up with a single pointer, to be used with the multiple mark pulley. The L26 with the bigger pulley (probably bigger to fix the voltage issues) and one mark is designed to be used with a degreed timing marker. Timing read from the marker versus timing read from the pulley. If you can put the L26 timing marker and damper/pulley on the L24 engine, that would be the way to go, I think. The timing marker on the cover might be a simple swap. Swapping dampers might take some work, although it looks you already have one removed.
  10. The drawing is from the 1975 FSM. Odd. A picture of the top of your manifold would be illuminating.
  11. There's others that know more but maybe you got a bad casting. If the sand you found came from the casting process that means the investment (probably wax back then) might have been damaged. The coolant could be coming from a leak between the cooling channel and the intake runner. Check the inside of that cylinder's runner. The head might be no good from the factory. Guys that port their runners sometimes over-do it and cut in to the cooling channel.
  12. N47's have the round exhaust ports.
  13. siteunseen makes a good point. The AAR's tend to get gummed up. I can't find a specific reference to the heating block but I did find a picture. I added red lines to indicate the inlet and outlet coolant lines. Check your coolant temperature sensor resistance at the ECU connector and compare it to the chart in the FSM. You might have dirty connections somewhere, raising resistance.
  14. If the idle speed changes when you remove the hose odds are it's working right. If you measure pressure with the hose on and off it will tell you a lot. Numbers are always good, "right on" just means that you feel good about it (no offense). The AAR came from the factory with a heating block under it, with coolant lines attached. If yours is gone, the AAR will not get as warm as designed and stay open. Could be part of your problem. You didn't mention the power line to the AAR. You can check power with a voltmeter, it should have power when the engine is running. It's on the fuel pump circuit.
  15. The high idle sounds like your AAR is not getting hot and staying hot. Do you still have the coolant line running to the mounting block for the AAR? That's what keeps it warm. And the power line to the AAR warms it up when the coolant is cold. On the rich running - have you confirmed that the fuel pressure drops with intake vacuum? You can have spot-on pressure, not running, but be rich running if the FRP is not adjusting pressure.
  16. A design that spins the pin while pulling might have some benefits. When the pin is pulled straight out the rust particles can wedge in the small spaces, and the high spots can gall the points that they can't get past. Spinning allows things to find their happy place, along with doing a little grinding on the high spots, and lubing up every surface. I had good luck threading old mag wheel lug nuts on to each end of my pin and spinning the pin while beating it back and forth. It got looser and looser until it could be punched out with a long bolt.
  17. Just realized that my other post was incorrect. The FSM describes reaming the head to to the proper size to fit the seat. And the interference fit spec. is at the end of the chapter in the specs. section. Recommended temperature for inserting the seats is in the chapter also. Too many numbers to piece-meal them out. Good luck. Index of /FSM/240z
  18. The replacement procedure is described in the Service Manual. It doesn't look too complex. They recommend boring them out, heating the head and pressing in the new ones. No tolerances given but maybe there's only one size and the hole is assumed to be untouched. After they're installed though they need to be ground to fit the valve. That's the part that takes the skill and is most important. If you're not going to grind them too you might as well have a shop do the whole job. You said you're a machinist so may know that but just in case...
  19. These are clues. Your friend is not really a mechanic, a real mechanic would use a meter to test, not foil. Here's another site for FSM's, a little easier to use since the files aren't zipped. Open Electrical System. Edit - never mind the link, something is screwed up on it. The page (godaddy)doesn't match the instructions. Maybe they'll fix it later. http://www.nicoclub.com/FSM/
  20. Considering his post in grannyknot's thread, I think he is looking for a supplier of new rings. Apparently some later 5 speeds used a different 5th gear synchro material, "carbon fiber" or something like that (or there's bad info out there) but my impression is that the 280Z and ZX 5 speeds used the same synchro ring for 1-5. I know that the one 80-83 5 speed I took apart had 5 brass rings. You would know better though.
  21. Here it is. You have to read the whole thing, a lot of learning happened along the way. High RPM shifting dynamics - Drivetrain - HybridZ
  22. Did you find any reason for the noise? And where did you get your parts? There is a very good thread over on Hybridz from a guy who wanted to build his transmission for high RPM shifts, racing style. He really knew what he was doing and discovered some interesting things about synchro gear options, and how to modify the the synchros so that they work perfectly. If you're in to perfecting your parts I can dig it up and post the link. On the synchros topic - they're designed to work with specific gear oil qualities. Oil film strength and viscosity are key. I wouldn't want any foreign materials in there at all.
  23. The picture is what it is. I wonder if Australian or British FSM's have the same drawings, or if they get their own.
  24. Here's a picture from 1976 AC-60. Throttle pedal on the lower left for reference.
  25. I notice also, although it's hard to tell, that your Timesert doesn't seem to be the copper color of the "flat washer" Timesert. It looks like the silver color of the "taper seat" model. Might be part of the problem. +++ TIME-SERT® SPARK PLUG THREAD REPAIR KITS +++ spark plug stripped thread repair kits repair damaged threads in spark plug hole stripped out approved
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