- Joined
- Oct 31, 2025
- Messages
- 138
Looking GOOD! Done a few of those back in the day. Things were so much simpler then...HEAVY sigh.
In the (much) later years it started to get difficult finding a case with pristine case lugs.
Looking GOOD! Done a few of those back in the day. Things were so much simpler then...HEAVY sigh.
I have the "Chineseum" carb on my 9n. It works well, although I had to slightly "waller" out the manifold flange holes because the carbs mounting studs were just a "tad" wider than stock. I also installed the 12 volt conversion with the good old Delco 10SI. Works fantastic.This morning worked on the 8n. Got the chineseum carb and proper fuel line put on. Fired right up. Changed the oil right after, sludge city. Drove it around the place a bit till I noticed the waterpump is about to come apart, impressive amount of play. Going to overall the entire cooling system and order the 12v conversion.
Plenty of brake disc material left if it is still in 1 piece............Clearly you're servicing your brakes too soon
And the Quadrajet sincerely appreciates you for that! I have run more than a few "Quads" and they all received a inline spin-on fuel filter with a top quality element (usually a Baldwin) at some location.This week I had two automotive jobs.
1985 Chevrolet C10 305 V8
New distributor, spark plugs, plug wires, air filter, external fuel filter and internal fuel filter (quadrajet), pcv valve, belts, radiator hoses, thermostat, coolant change, oil change and transmission fluid/filter change
1999 Chevrolet Malibu 3.1 V6
Lower intake gaskets, radiator hoses, thermostat, serpentine belt, oil change
I went thru it on an '87 302 F150 years ago. Still keep my shop-brew stainless bushings in a baggie in my box. If you can get the water pump to stay in place, it provides locating for the bushings to drill into the timing cover and stay concentricTook the blades off my uncle’s mower so he could sharpen both, expandable 3/4 rachet is one of the best tools ever bought. Brought home the 86 f150 5.0-EFI/auto. Going to try reviving but its rough.. beat by cows rough. Got parked due to coolant leak on the back of the timing cover.. then the bolts broke off. That was 20 years ago back before I knew anything.. still don’t but I’m better at figuring it out. Think the transmission or rear end has a issue also but have to figure that out if it runs.
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Looking at those pics just makes me reaffirm my vow of NEVER parting with my 93 Silverado. They are going to have to entomb me in her!Water pump R&R on '15 BMW 328d. Not bad at all except for dealing with all the quirky German engineering.
Obviously a still photo does no good but the pump that came off was roasted -- gobs of play at the pulley. A Saleri came off and a Saleri went back on
Lovely that the ribs will oil themselves.Well, things actually went better than planned over at the Crimetown ranch.
Into the shop went my daughter's 2020 Ram 1500 classic, 5.7. It sits at 85ish thousand km. Before we took delivery, they fixed a few things, notably the leaking passenger side cv boot. They said the new cv shaft comes with the whole stub shaft assembly. Ok, trust but verify.
I started out back. Each brake was disassembled, antiseize applied to surfaces, slide pins lubed, calipers bled and then the rear gear oil changed. Well, old dumb Brian must have been favored by the gods, rhe rear rotors popped off with nothing more than a love tap by my palm. Everything looked good and went together well. I was becoming leary as this never happens. Ok so I at least dropped the drain plug and hex bit into the drain pan. Can't have everything.
Up front, same deal, one rotor popped right off, the other needed the bolt through the mounting ear and it popped quick. So, up first was rhe passenger side, nope, no antiseize in the hub splines, lots of powdery rust but my god! A little tap with a hammer and it was free! I knocked the tripot off the stub shaft and what?? They used antiseize!!!!! It buttoned up fine with a quick bleed.
Driver side..... hmmmm..... nope, lots of rust, a few whacks with hammer and the spines were free. The inner tripot took coaxing but it broke free without the stub shaft, and what? Antiseize??? *** is going on??? Well everything got fresh antiseize and again, buttoned up fine. The front diff was serviced and off the blocks it went. Of course I didn't have any ATF laying around so the transfer case will be another day.
Sorry this was a run on, I'm just amazed that this stayed on course, i suffered only minor cuts and it was able to leave the shop under its own power. And the ribs were good.
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