These fixes always feel good. Keep that sucker running.Not a vehicle but had to fix our dryer, the 23 year old motor went kaput, so I replaced the motor, put a new belt and tensioner on it, new rollers, a new fan since the old one seized on the motor and I had to be destructively removed, currently waiting on the new foam seal to put the lint trap plenum back on, but I did plug it in and run it momentarily on air fluff to make sure it works it seems a lot quieter now and will live on another few years.
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So basically you bought a brand new IKEA dryer.Not a vehicle but had to fix our dryer, the 23 year old motor went kaput, so I replaced the motor, put a new belt and tensioner on it, new rollers, a new fan since the old one seized on the motor and I had to be destructively removed, currently waiting on the new foam seal to put the lint trap plenum back on, but I did plug it in and run it momentarily on air fluff to make sure it works it seems a lot quieter now and will live on another few years.
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A new dryer is like $500 and I fixed mine with about $130 in parts, I also didn't have to shut the water off and remove the washing machine which I'd have to do to get a new dryer in there.So basically you bought a brand new IKEA dryer.
I'm in this same boat. Our front load LG washer developed a metric ton of runout in the drum. Based upon research I'm guessing it's the "spider arm" that bolts to the rear of the drum.A new dryer is like $500 and I fixed mine with about $130 in parts, I also didn't have to shut the water off and remove the washing machine which I'd have to do to get a new dryer in there.
If it wasn't a super common Whirlpool(Kitchen Aid branded) dryer that the parts are super cheap and common I probably wouldn't have messed with it, but Whirlpool dryers have used essentially the same parts for decades, the OE parts from a reputable dealer aren't too expensive and you can find surplus OE parts on eBay pretty cheap sometimes also there's quite a lot of cheap aftermarket parts.I'm in this same boat. Our front load LG washer developed a metric ton of runout in the drum. Based upon research I'm guessing it's the "spider arm" that bolts to the rear of the drum.
I got parts -- including a lot of just-in-case stuff -- for about $230. You can't touch a decent new washing machine for that.
If it works, I'm a hero. If not, I knew I might be gambling $230 and still have to buy a new washer. Everything is a calculated risk and this one seemed acceptable to me.....
I love those adapters man.The ex's '65 Falcon. She insisted it needed the rear d/s balanced because of a vibe at 50, and her dad told her a balance would fix it. I was skeptical but I couldn't say it was definitely incorrect.
So, I helped her pull the rear d/s and noticed the slip shaft was pretty chewed up. After a little research I suggested a new slip yoke and tailshaft bushing might be step #1 before paying for a d/s balance.
We got it on the lift today and I went to insert my SnapOn puller....well, turns out NO bushing was present. Ok, that's a problem. Thus, we drove in a new bushing with the SnapOn S8673C1, replaced the slip yoke and I suggested getting rid of the crappy greaseable joint in favor of 5-1310X since we had it apart.
The ex reports the vibe at 50 is gone, so yay.....I guess
I got to use my custom machined pinch weld adapters again:View attachment 172405
On the lift View attachment 172406
Slip yoke actually not horrendous considering the complete lack of a bushing View attachment 172407
Not mine:View attachment 172409View attachment 172408
That's a major color shift between the two dipstick photos.Made a new "measuring gallon"
As you can see, I stop at 3 quarts
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Sharpies don't like to write on water jug bottles...
Adjusted the oil level, changed 2 quarts oil due to storage concerns . Would still not be against a UOA, we are DEFINITELY in the OCI for 15k+ miles now...
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And somehow some way I overfilled it so I got the oil LEVEL back down to where it should be.
From this(yesterday. Overfilled)View attachment 172481
To this (today, this morning, after letting some out. Siphon attempt through dipstick hole was a fail, need specialized pump for that.)View attachment 172482View attachment 172483
Checked coolant color
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Added replacement 50/50 to top of Cold Fill line
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Dreamt of my now-Internet famous Subaru. Awaiting tomorrow with baited breath for my gasket kit. Taking it easy for today...
Taurus chronically sets P0442, P0420 and P0430. Realizing P0442 may not be a simple gas cap fix. Soon to have rotor looked at, it vibrates on highway while cruising and more upon braking. Passenger side front.