
Read your comments voicing your displeasure with Subaru engineers. Be glad it isn’t an early ‘90s Jaguar. Took me eight different size wrenches to remove the radiator from a V12 XJS. Metric, SAE and Whitworth which I was able to cover with an adjustable wrench.
Read your comments voicing your displeasure with Subaru engineers. Be glad it isn’t an early ‘90s Jaguar. Took me eight different size wrenches to remove the radiator from a V12 XJS. Metric, SAE and Whitworth which I was able to cover with an adjustable wrench.
There's supposed to be foam around the radiator? Now you have me questioning the POs "new radiator" installation. If it's anything like all the other "upgrades" he did, I bet he just omitted them.Truck felt hotter wheeling in Moab at the pre-run and A/C performance was not good on-trail. Truck temp gauge did not get too hot (all 80 temp gauges have a middle "dummy" spot where it does not move much. Can be modified and I did in LongCruiser but not here). Over 30MPH A/C was comfortably cold. A/C system is in good shape.
Saturday:
Re-did the foam at sides and bottom of 80 radiator (that I should have installed when I replaced the radiator two weeks ago) and added a 2x2" piece under the A/C condenser that seems to have been something that maybe existed from the factory a million years ago (it would help more air flow through condenser when not moving) and a 2x2" piece under the radiator that also may have been from the factory a million years ago (and may help keep some engine compartment air from recirculating under and back out front. I already had the top foam that is very important to keep hot engine compartment air from recirculating. Added much thinner and more compressible foam between fan shroud and radiator.
Installed Landtank modded new fan clutch (modded to verify and slightly lower the temperature it starts to engage - a empirically determined temp - and changed
Some for sure! See my thread at https://forum.ih8mud.com/threads/go...-condenser-and-radiator.1378701/post-16279136There's supposed to be foam around the radiator? Now you have me questioning the POs "new radiator" installation. If it's anything like all the other "upgrades" he did, I bet he just omitted them.
Thanks for the pictures, Daniel! It figures I don't have any of those on my cruiser! And thank you for the links to Amazon. Saved me a bunch of time!Some for sure! See my thread at https://forum.ih8mud.com/threads/go...-condenser-and-radiator.1378701/post-16279136



I made a mistake on 'not my rig' during assembly and didnt pay attention to bolt lengths on the timing cover.



Well done.My e-brake was a bit loose so I put the 200 rear axle on Jack stands and adjusted the ebrakes. Damn that Star wheel is hard to see. I adjusted to a hard stop and backed off until they started moving. One video said two clicks, one said 5. I played with it and until it felt good.
Tested it and the ebrake still was loose.
I would put it in drive with the ebrake engaged and it would slowly move
Then removed the cup holder and adjusted the nut with the brake disengaged.
Now it will hold the vehicle in Drive or Reverse with no gas. It will move slightly if you apply throttle
Pretty sure that shows it is working fine. To double check I went to check the TLCA Vehicle requirements for Cruise Moab and they don't list any for an Automatic, yet we have it on our Vehicle Inspection list.
Interesting. I assumed it was substantially the 40 and 55 with the t-case parking brakes that are the prime suspect. Not that the style with the bell crank and star wheel on the rear drums are that much better.The E-brake inspection was to address all the old trucks (40, mini, 55, 60, etc....) that used to attend that had non-functioning or poorly functioning e-brakes. It appears a lot has changed with e-brakes and the thpes of vehicles that attend in the last 20 years.
Valid point, unfortunately on the newest vehicles with electric e-brakes they automatically disconnect when put in drive so you can't actually test it. You can test the service brakes but not the e-brake.Interesting. I assumed it was substantially the 40 and 55 with the t-case parking brakes that are the prime suspect. Not that the style with the bell crank and star wheel on the rear drums are that much better.
I think the fact that so many trucks have automatics now the parking brake inspection is just as critical as ever. If you drive a stick you know when your parking brake is less than good, usually evidenced by the 4x4 you have at the ready when you park.
With an automatic you can ignore it more easily and I bet a fair number of auto owners don't even set their parking brakes routinely.