Everything posted by Zed Head
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		Uhm. I think thats supposed to be attached.
		
		Mine broke the exact same way after I installed urethane bushings on both sides, front and back. It's why many recommend rubber on the back and urethane in front. When the suspension moves and the TC rod moves with it, the end of the rod (that's missing in your picture because it broke off) has to move also since the pivot point is between the bushings. As the rod moves down, the end moves up, and vice-versa. The back urethane bushing doesn't allow free movement, and has a good lever length on the tip of the rod, plus it's very strong so eventually a fatigue crack starts at the thread shoulder and the threaded portion breaks off. If you decide to go with the stock TC rod, put the stock rubber bushings on the back (you can get them at RockAuto). It's only stressed when braking in reverse or when you back the front wheel in to a curb (that's when mine broke) so you'll still get the benefits of tighter suspension when driving and braking. You'll notice that some of the groaning and creaking from the front end disappears also. Here's a thread I started when it happened, with more details. Note the part about the control arm bushings. My arm bushings were shot also, which probably contributed to the breakage. http://www.classiczcars.com/forums/suspension-steering-s30/37660-1976-t-c-rod-broke-polyurethane-bushings.html
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		I want to make a Mazda Distributor like a Datsun
		
		Isn't the rectangular box the ECU? Looks like a Nissan ECCS system with the ignitor on the coil and the YEL/GRN wire as the amplifying signal wire. The two wires from the distributor would probably be LED or Hall effect since they're powered from the coil negative post. The sink would be on the coil/ignitor bracket then. "Engine Speed Switch" looks like an input to the ECU, with the drawn line missing or on the next page. And the instrument cluster would be the tach, counting current pulses on the coil negative side. Just some guessing.
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		What Brand of Clutch Should I Buy For 240Z?
		
		Considering the agony of trying to diagnose a problem after everything's installed, you can't really over-think it. I got lucky on my first clutch maintenance because my car was factory stock and the clutch kit came with its own collar and bearing. Since then I've read the painful stories and collected a variety of used pressure plates and collars, so I can see where you can go wrong. I will always measure first in the future.
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		What Brand of Clutch Should I Buy For 240Z?
		
		Should be the 71B, not C, according to the attached from the FSM. European, correct? Factory stock 240Z? Is it working now? If so, there should be no major problems. You're changing the clutch, nt the transmission. Just make sure to measure before installing. Where people go wrong is when they change the relationship of the throwout collar ears to the slave cylinder position, accidentally, by trying to match a combination of aftermarket parts to the year of their car. Measure before installing. The various web pages, like the one I linked above, are just starting points to help find the right parts, to get started on a swap.
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		What Brand of Clutch Should I Buy For 240Z?
		
		Here's a link to that picture that Jeff G might have been referring to. You can see the bearing on the bottom and the collar on the top, with the important measurements. Nissan Throwout Bearing Collar Specs Comparison Measurements
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		What Brand of Clutch Should I Buy For 240Z?
		
		I picked up a Rhinopac off Craigslist last year and it works great. Smoother engagement than the Zoom Perfection kit I had from Napa. The Perfection clutch would chirp the tires, the Rhinopac not so much. On making sure the new parts work correctly - the throwout bearing collar height needs to work with the pressure plate height, which would be independent of the transmission year (no offense intended Jeff G). Essentially all of the transmissions have the same mounting point for the slave cylinder. It's the stack height of the flywheel, pressure plate and top of the collar ears that must be right. ~92 mm from pressure plate mounting surface to the top of the collar ears seems to be the number to shoot for. My Napa kit came with a collar. Some kits only provide a bearing. Make sure that the height of the stack of parts, from the mounting surface of the pressure plate up to the ears that the clutch fork rides on, is the same.
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		which fuel line is which?
		
		what kind of car? diagrams in FSM.
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		Tokiko HPS vs Illumina installation
		
		Just get the same part number for the Illuminas and they should drop right in. One starts with HZ, the other with BZ. They're the same dimension, the difference is the adjustability of the Illuminas. The main consideration with sectioning is that you have to get a shorter insert to work right in the shorter strut tube. Illumina vs HP isn't relevant, it's the length of either that matters.
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		Which Transmition? 4 or 5 speed with 390 gears & turbo..
		
		The rear gear usually is matched to first gear since that's where you'll really notice it. And most of the replies here are about freeway cruising which is not really why you would modify to a turbo. Plus the fact that turbos aren't really known for being an autocross modification, as far as I know (I don't know much about autocross). Doesn't seem like you're any closer to an answer. I've seen several posts on Hybridz about keeping a taller rear gear (like the 3.54 instead of 3.9) because the torque builds sooner with a turbo when you get in to boost and you get more time "on-boost" in first and second gear. But those guys are looking for raw acceleration. Seems like the close ratio might help your autocross and the 3.54 might help the road-racing, depending on what your top speed is. Trading off ease of leaving a stop light if you use the 5 speed with its 3.062 first gear.
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		Transverse Bar
		
		There's a guy on Hybridz who makes one - Steel Brace for R200 CLSD Finned Cover in S30; New List and design... - Vendor's Forum - HybridZ You bought the cover but not the CLSD that goes with it?
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		Transverse Bar
		
		Len, your question can't be understood. There is a transverse link on the Z's, often called the lower control arm, and there is a differential case mounting member ,often called a mustache bar, but there is nothing called a transverse bar.
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		Clunk, Pop and Whine goes the differential
		
		The one that broke could just be an open diff that broke its spider gear shaft (might be called a pinion shaft also), and the broken piece bounced around and tore up some wire and a bolt head. I had one shoot completely out of the diff, on a GM car. Left a scary looking hole in the diff cover. A picture of the differential itself from the other side of the ring gear might show something. Take one each of the broken and the new/old.
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		Ron Tyler Differential Mount
		
		I've remembered another problem with using the 3-1108 with the RT design. The heads of the long bolts that pass through the differential might interfere with the top of the crossmember. Some people grind the GM mount to get clearance, others drill holes in the top of the crossmember. You might get on to Hybridz and search a little, you'll probably find some pictures. The design really needs to be modified to use the 3-1108 for L6 use. Ron Tyler put the dimensions on the web and they're just been copied directly, for V8 applications. I have a mount similar to the RT design with a GM 3-1108 mount but it sits higher in the tunnel. I made it myself though. You'll have to put a lot of extra work in to use one you buy off the internet, unless you use a snubber. For the cost and trouble, in retrospect, I would probably just buy a new stock mount. New rubber is tough. It's fun to modify though.
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		1978 280Z 2+2 Cylinder Head Removal
		
		Funny, in retro I see my mistake on what Leon replied to (Post #56). 180 on the camshaft is 360 on the crankshaft as I've noticed every time I adjust my valves. Turning the camshaft with the head on is a no-no though. $5,000 for a 1978 2+2 with an extra low compression engine is pretty good money.
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		Ron Tyler Differential Mount
		
		You can. The design that everyone copied though is the original Ron Tyler design, which he intended for a small block chevy engine application. Word is that it lowers the nose of the differential and may or may not lead to vibration from drive shaft misalignment when used with the L6. I'm surprised that none of the guys that sell these haven't tweaked the design to work best with the L6.
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		Safety Not Guaranteed V8 2+2
		
		It's already got one star! I had to click on some words I don't understand to get on to the web site, hope I didn't download some sort of Dutch virus. Here are the links from CL for when the ad dies. IMCDb.org: 1977 Datsun 280Z 2+2 [s30] in "Safety Not Guaranteed, 2012" Safety Not Guaranteed (2012) - IMDb
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		Safety Not Guaranteed V8 2+2
		
		Saw this ad on CL and rented the DVD just to see what it was about. Sounds like a V8 in the film, and has a weird Euro style right tail-light, I believe. Own a piece of Hollywood. 1977 Datsun 280Z 2+2 from the film "Safety Not Guaranteed"
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		Quick question
		
		Mine has been gone for a while. Don't forget to insulate the left over wire ends. Some will have power with the key on.
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		L28 exhaust manifold source
		
		I have a muffler shop fitted pipe from the resonator to the muffler. My muffler looks like it was meant to be there but the outlet pipe is not tucked up as tight to the bumper as yours because of the offset. Seems like MSA's stuff might not be a perfect fit for all cars. Might be worthwhile to get everything from MSA but the final pipe and have that piece custom bent.
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		Clunk, Pop and Whine goes the differential
		
		If you describe the year and model of car someone might have an idea. Pictures are always good too (of the differential, not the track).
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		L28 exhaust manifold source
		
		The muffler for my 76 has an offset exit and central inlet and tucks up next to the gas tank. Yours looks like it has center inlet and exit, which forces the muffler to hang lower. Did you get the package from MSA or did you piece some of it together? Can't really tell from the MSA site what a buyer really gets.
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		L28 exhaust manifold source
		
		Is that just for you or for anybody who orders now? Swarm!!
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		Time for diff and transmission swap, what more to change?
		
		On the driveshaft, Chas - You might be thinking of the 71C transmission with the 71B bellhousing swap. 1973 will have the 71B four speed, so the 71B five speed should drop right in with no driveshaft change.
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		L28 exhaust manifold source
		
		Your 78 has the N47 head with round exhaust ports so you can use any manifold from 1975 to 1978. Not a huge range. The earlier manifolds might work also, but they may also flow a lower volume, causing restriction. Not sure on those. The later ZX manifolds will bolt up but the head pipe flange is in a different location so your stock pipe won't fit anymore. If you find one, make sure that the divider, that separates the front three cylinders from the back three, is intact inside. Also, have the mating surface checked for flatness and corrosion, they tend to twist and bend a little over time, plus exhaust leaks corrode the surface. Any good machine shop can grind it flat.although some charge more than others.
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		Dropping 83 ZX Motor Into My 77 Z
		
		Might be worth double-checking the intake manifold. I'm sure that they're different but don't know how significant it is. I remember thinking that the throttle linkage would take some work because of the the throttle body location. And the BCDD is different. The throttle bodies won't interchange because the bolt patterns are different and the ZX throttle body has a smaller opening. In retro, it does look easier to stick with the early N42 (N47?) intake. Make sure that the divider inside the exhaust manifold hasn't rotted away. It was on my engine, creating a large open cavity for all six ports. No pulse separation.
 
     
     
     
    