frank
Club Member
did a vid of how much the tubby quietens the exhaust down only 1 silencer needed really
http://tinypic.com/player.php?v=xcnji0&s=5
http://tinypic.com/player.php?v=xcnji0&s=5
I dread to think what my fuel economy will be. Perhaps not quite as bad as I think, as it will actually have closed loop control this time around but I expect it to be pretty cruddy overall, especially if I boot it
Fitted newly painted wheel trims.. They look good, but the one I painted quickly(on a cold and rainy day, after only washing it then spraying it) looks 10 times better than the other 3 that I washed, cleaned with thinner, dried, primed, then painted in very nice weather. ??? They are only temporary anyway.
Rechecked the voltage on my airflow meter and monitored it from startup til the engine was warm. Started out around 1.49v and dropped off to 1.13 when warm.. Still waiting for money transferr to paypal to buy a new TB
Going to install some stainless allen bolts for the cam cover
Going for this http://www.eurocarparts.com/ecp/c/N...020fd20aeda9dc84912fc2c2c7c46fabf335d1&000329 It's cheaper than anything I could get here unless I go to a scrappy.. but the scrappies here would probably still want a fortune for it and I've about had it with them anyway. Needed some simple parts but they said they couldn't be bothered and they don't let people pick their own parts. I'm not going to buy car stuff here anymore anyway unless I absolutely have to.. things usually cost 2-10 times as much as they should. Just some of the plastic clips to hold the underbody panels on were £3.50 eachYou going for one from a scrappy or recon one?
better than £550 for the bosch one... though if I had the Bosch one, I would just buy a new airflow meter :/200 quid
surely there is no need to buy a new one, can you not just recon yours??better than £550 for the bosch one... though if I had the Bosch one, I would just buy a new airflow meter :/
surely there is no need to buy a new one, can you not just recon yours??
messaged mateAny guides? I've already tried to resolder it twice. Didn't just reheat them, I added some new solder. I guess I could just take the whole thing apart now that I plan to buy one anyway... always did love taking things apart
i changed my map for more boostage this morning too kris (screwdriver job mine is )Yeah, as it happens i need the intake pipe welding up so im driving the car without boost...so ive gotta keep the pedal sensible or it overfuels (left the sc fuel map installed).
better than £550 for the bosch one... though if I had the Bosch one, I would just buy a new airflow meter :/
There should be one in the guides section but you have to be a paid member to see it. otherwise im pretty sure that the info is somewhere else on the net for free but i dont have a link im sorry.Is there a guide around here somewhere then?
USE. COPPER. GREASE. BETWEEN. ALLY. AND. STEEL. AND. DON'T. OVER. TIGHTEN. EVERYTHING ! (This is the same garage that meant I had to sploosh £70 on a rattle gun to get my wheels off after they put them back on with air tools!).
Got my heavy duty puller in the post. It got my passenger side wiper arm off but the driver side wouldn't budge. Finally found an old knackered puller in my dad's garage. It kept tilting off but by leaning my entire body weight on it eventually came off. The spidle was covered in galvanically corroded aluminium. I've put out a scrappy request for new arms as they're chewed up to heck.
Note to Nissan in Wigan. USE. COPPER. GREASE. BETWEEN. ALLY. AND. STEEL. AND. DON'T. OVER. TIGHTEN. EVERYTHING ! (This is the same garage that meant I had to sploosh £70 on a rattle gun to get my wheels off after they put them back on with air tools!).
Nah, that's true Will. More interested in getting the new shocks on at the mo' .
Totally true that Paul . Scuttle hides it a tiny bit Will.If ya want it done proper to ur spec, do it urself
looks normal.
btw not all compression tester reads the same.
first time i used my tester on my first micra i read round 14-15bar, then i had to replace the gauge valve and it went down to 12-13bar
i try to test compressions as fast as possible after depressurising the fuel and removing the plugs so that the cooling engine won't affect the readings too much.
shim gaps and valve timing will affect peak compression readings
Looks normal to me too, but its strange, last time i did the test, i got around 12,5bar on all cylinders. Yes, i disconnect all the injector plugs, dizzy small plug, hot engine and WOT. I have all the gaps within spec, just have a 260º/10mm inlet cam.
Anyway, there is still some oil appearing on the pistons, more on the 2nd cyl (like it used to have), not a valve steam seals problem because ive replace them?
maybe worn oil rings allowing some oil into the cylinders and sealing the rings hence higher peak readings?
the piston top should normally be bone dry
it always is the oil control rings in my experiance, and never the valve guide seals, i always clean and re-stretch the rings so that they scrape the bore like they,re supposed to
Only 3rd cyl is dry, the rest is a bit wet and 2nd cyl is always very wet. That makes sense because this engine dont go like the old SR engine with similar spec, maybe lower compressions when booting but good readings at the test. Ah crap, i will make a good engine from scratch (1.3 with 1.0 pistons and 260º/10mm cams), but will run this engine until i have it ready. Just need to buy some crank/rods bearings, swap the pistons/rods and get the head/block skimmed, already have the piston rings (new), timing kit (very good condition) and gasket kit.
when my first blue slx had worn rings it lacked alot of torque and so had to rev in 4th in order to reach 60mph and also had very high compression.
just cranking the engine won't have as much pressure as say a hot combustion, therefore oil may easily seep past a worn ring, build up inside the cylinder till it seals the rings hydraulically to give a high false ready. during normal combustion the high heat would burn this leaked oil (some smoke and oil loss) and the high pressure could leak past the worn rings into the casing resulting in loadsa blowby and torque loss.
building new engine, check the bore, piston, rings etc are all close as possible within spec
only the top 2 rings (compression rings) are responsible for compression eh
the oil control rings er ....................leave a very fine film of oil for sealage/lubrication eh
Today i replace the valve steam seals with the engine on place, not that hard using a leakdown tester to hold the valves.
I hope that the oil consumption problem goes away, otherwise i will have to make another engine...
BTW, did a compression test:
1st cyl: 13,4bar
2nd cyl: 13,2bar
3rd cyl: 13,3bar
4th cyl: 13,8bar
Isnt 13bar the max value for a normal engine and 11 the minimum? Why those higher values on my engine? Leakdown test gives 20% leakage to the crankcase, no leaks to the intake, exhaust or coolant, so its normal i think...
I'm being a tad picky but 20% leakdown is a little on the high side but not unheard on stock type rings. I'd look for <10% leakdown and <5% variation between cylinders. It looks as though the rings in general are perhaps not up to their best
Reminds me of my old 90k miler CG13 that had mirror bores and would lose loads of oil out of the breather due to huge blowby and also end up with a black rear bumper. I never bothered to do a leakdown, but when we replaced the engine for a very low miler the blowby and oil comsumption was almost eliminated by comparison and a clean car no matter how hard it was driven.
this is how i do it SHED...Thought rather than pay £10 per wheel to swap some tyres over i'd do it myself, ghetto style for £2 from poundland for 2 tyre levers and some man powerzzz OMG! 104kg jumping up and down on the first tyre didn't break the bead!!! what!! lol.
Going to have to get loco with a jack and bit of wood and a K10's kerb weight to break these bead's hearts haha!