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Captain Obvious

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Everything posted by Captain Obvious

  1. Actually, that's exactly what I was expecting. Tank or APC or something! Oh well, I thought I could coax an interesting story.
  2. So from that, I'm guessing that you were planning to use poly and didn't realize that you need to leave the outer sleeves intact and just get rid of the inner sleeve and the rubber? If that's the case, then that's a bummer. So, were you actually able to find new OEM style moustache bar bushings? I thought those were NLA and gone from the face of the earth.
  3. OK, I just gots'ta know... What piece of equipment is that mini-anvil made from? Have you got a pic of the origin? I'm sure it's something interesting!!
  4. Haha, right you are! Glad to help. Unless you're in a hurry though, I'd suggest you give it a day or so to see if anyone else chimes in with simpler / better ways to check for fluid inside there? Fishing that disk out is a PITA.
  5. I don't have any links for you to how-to's, but I've seen several pictures of engines/tranny assemblies still sitting on motor mounts on the cross member with the whole thing still sitting on tires. In other words, it's completely possible, and looks easy. I'm not sure if that's the recommended way to do it, but if I was taking the whole thing apart, that's what I would do.
  6. it being dry when you removed the master cylinder means that someone, prior to you, has already replaced the failed master cylinder. That's good. And depending on how quickly they noticed and addressed the issue, your booster may not have sucked in a lot of fluid. You can check for fluid inside by pulling off the aluminum parallelogram where the master cylinder mounts. Then pry out the vacuum seal and remove the output shaft (the part that pokes the master cylinder). Once you have that output shaft out of the way, you can look inside and see if it's wet. Maybe stick a paper towel in the hole and reach around to see if it mops up anything? If the paint inside isn't peeling, and the spring is all shiny like, then you're probably OK. And then you can spent an hour or more trying to fish your reaction disk (which fell out of place when you removed the output shaft) out of the clamshell.
  7. Have you considered one of those ricer tips the Hondaboys run? You can get them quite large. (Actually, I just had to come up with something to say to add my name to the amusingly growing list of people providing non-answers to your question.)
  8. I don't have anything to add about the suspension work, but from looking at your brake booster, it's clear that you had a master cylinder rear seal failure at some time in the past. And if that's the case, it's likely that you've got old moisture laden brake fluid festering inside the booster eating the paint and rusting the metal bits. The longer it's in there, the worse things will be.
  9. Wait... Is that your car running on that nut-brown gas??? Must have been quite the surprise when you drained the tank to find it looked like that!
  10. I was thinking the same thing. I can't believe it actually ran on that stuff!! I ran my 260 for a little bit on the old stuff from the tank and it left this very sticky residue all over the insides of the carbs and intake manifolds. After five minutes of running, the throttle butterflies got sticky and would hang up just from the glue. Gross.
  11. I think we're talking about different tubes. The 73-74 tubes I was referring to are screwed into the bottoms of the carbs, not the intake manifolds. The faces of the 73-74 carbs have these trapezoidal shaped holes for water passageways that they could have used to pass water through the spacer and into the carbs (like the 72's), but they didn't. They chose to plug those holes with rubber plugs and drill and tap new holes into the bottom of the carbs instead. Then they screwed metal nipples into the bottoms of the carbs for coolant inlet and outlet. Here's a plc with a good view of the coolant tubes and the faces of the flat tops: The holes I think you're talking about are on the intake manifolds - Four holes on the front one, and two on the rear? Four of those holes (the rearmost four threaded ones) are to mount the idle bypass tube for the 73-74 tubes. Note that one of yours has the twisted off remains of one of the idle tube retaining screws broken off stuck in the hole. Doesn't affect you, but that's what that is. The other two holes (at the front of the front manifold) with the vacuum nipples pressed in are for constant vacuum sources and were not used for distributor vacuum advance. Probably academic, but those vacuum holes were originally used for a) the throttle opener device, and 2) the anti-backfire valve. The vacuum advance should come off a ported source on the carb bodies, not the intake manifolds. Here's a crowded shot of a mostly stock 260. You can see the mounting screws for the idle screw, and the bundle of snakes of other vacuum lines, etc: As for what to do with the holes... I believe the holes for the idle tube are blind, and you can just leave them open. The other holes with the vacuum nipples, you'll have to do something with. I don't know how much emissions stuff you're planning to run, but you might need one of them for a throttle opener system? Other one just cap? Or get elegant and pull the tube out and weld the holes shut?
  12. 7tooZ, That system is beautiful! I hope it works as well as it looks!
  13. Wow... On the short list of things I did not need to know today, I believe that's at the top.
  14. Thanks for the pics. It's been so long since I've seen them from that angle that I didn't remember the details of the face shape or the holes. I can tell you with certainty however, that the phenolic spacer plates for 73 and 74 have the six sided shape like the ones from your 72. The differences are that the 72's have coolant holes and are thicker. With the flat top carbs of 73-74, they used thinner spacers. Presumably to account for increased girth of the flat top carbs and/or the accompanying air cleaner. The mounting faces of the 73-74 carbs have coolant holes on the mounting face, but they didn't use them. They drilled and tapped holes underneath for metal hose nipples instead. The whole thing with the carb heating seems like they kept changing it and never got it all worked out. Then in 75, they went to EFI. Also, unrelated to the above, but if you're interested in amassing info about the early carbs... I haven't researched it in depth, but believe the 70-71's were the four screw round tops, and the 72's were the three screws. Makes it easier to identify quickly from the top without having to see the shape of the mounting flange.
  15. All of the carbs 70 through 74 use the same mounting bolt geometry. The holes are in the same location on all of them, meaning that any carb will bolt up to any manifold. They changed the thickness of the phenolic spacers at times (70-72 are thicker than 73-74), and hence, the stud length to compensate. But all of the holes and studs are a square pattern and are in the same locations. They changed the water routing scheme over the years as well: 70 and 71 used the square mounting face (pic of the carbs in the bag), and they did not route any water into the carbs. 72 used the six sided mounting face shape you have pictured above with the holes in the phenolic. They routed water through the holes and into the carbs. 73 and 74 also used the six sided mounting face, and were capable of routing water through the spacer and into the carbs, but they did not do that. Instead, they used a solid phenolic spacer without coolant holes and ran a complete additional independent coolant stream to the carbs. This coolant path is in addition to the one that ran through the intake manifolds. So about your statement here: The 260 intake manifolds (the N36's) used a square attachment points (as every year manifold did), but they had the six sided face. It's been too long and I don't remember if they put water holes in the N36 manifolds on the carb mounting faces. I know the phenolic spacers are solid, but I don't remember if they bothered to put the holes in the manifolds themselves. Have you got any pics of the carb mounting faces of the N36's with the spacer removed?
  16. I don't have the ZX manuals downloaded. Anyone know what is the unlabeled device between 8 and 6?
  17. Not sure this adds anything to the discussion, but I once cut up a stock pulley/dampers on my lathe to reduce the number of pulleys. I was just messing around at the time, but if you were concerned with the accuracy (I wasn't), it wouldn't add a lot of time. Here's a pic: More pics and some details here: http://www.classiczcars.com/topic/50727-a-project-is-brewing/?page=2#comment-46928
  18. Won't you take me to..... Welcome aboard!
  19. Based on my understanding of the system, I believe you nailed it. Needing that vacuum line at the back of the car kinda negates some of the advantages of moving the can though, doesn't it?
  20. Cool. Glad you got to the bottom of the issue. I second the call for an autopsy of the screwy throttle body. Send it to me if you don't want to do it yourself. I'll open that sucker up! Dave, I would expect the same thing. With the wire off, you might discern a longer time to return to idle if you blip the throttle. Probably not a lot longer, but you might notice some difference. While you were in there messing around, were you able to determine if there was any change in idle speed with the wire connected vs. disconnected?
  21. Zed, I dont know how large the passageways involved are, but yes... If my understanding is correct, it could/should result in a small decrease in idle speed if you were to disconnect the wire at idle. And yes, it would just be baked into the idle screw position. JSM, good luck with the investigation!
  22. I don't know about new new cars, but they used the same basic concept in the 2000's. Couple differences though. The cans weren't always round, but were shaped to fit whatever tiny odd shaped space was available, and another difference is that the actuation was usually electrical through the use of a solenoid valve instead of the vacuum driven valve built into the cap on top of the can. They used the control brain to purge the can under the desired conditions instead of a vacuum signal. And diagnostics were incorporated into the system as well.
  23. Well moving the carbon canister to somewhere else ought to be no problem. I think getting rid of the tank behind that rear quarter panel would be a little more risk. You do not, under any circumstances, want to push liquid gasoline into your carbon canister. My read on that overflow tank behind the quarter panel is that it is the highest highest highest point that liquid could ever ever reach. And then they pull a line off higher than that for the vapor recovery system.
  24. Zed, the BCDD operation, as I understand it, goes like this... Chamber #17 is a pneumatic amplifier. If there is enough vacuum in chamber #17, it will lift plunger #9 off it's seat and allow some vacuum into chamber #18. And then if there is enough vacuum in chamber #18, it will lift plunger #13 off it's seat and allow air to pass around the throttle butterfly. So some points of interest... The further run in the adjustment screw on the bottom, the easier it is to lift #9 off it's seat. That's why the BCDD will operate at a lower vacuum. When the solenoid is energized (and the pin is retracted) this defeats build up of vacuum in chamber #17. This is because vacuum pulled into chamber #17 from the intake manifold side is just bled off by pulling in air from the upstream side of the throttle body. In order to enable the BCDD, they block the bleed passage on the upstream side of #17 and allow the vacuum from the intake manifold to build up in chamber #17. If that vacuum gets high enough, it will lift the plunger off it's seat. Keep in mind that I didn't design the thing, but that's my read.
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