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Finished my car...photos
by
Helliouse
on 10 Feb, 2012 12:08
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Hello,
Thought I would share my finished product, well semi finished, enough that I can start driving it.
Photos:
Purdy PhotosYoutube:
The Car...Still have a few items I want to complete, but they will come later. Have other vehicles i need to get running...
My 1990 Jetta TD, what it got:
Franken 1.6L (1.6 Block, 1.9 head)
Stock turbo
Merc Injectors
minor porting
little Inter-cooler (3x11x22)
new suspension w/ ~1" lift (winter drifts tend to ruin low cars here)
Poly Bushings
2.75" exhaust
3" intake
upgrade rad fans
Not 100PSI pump, Carter high pressure pump (14-16PSI) 100 GPH free flow. (Sorry for getting my numbers mixed up!)
Things to come:
Cold air Intake
Rebuild injection pump
Tuned intake mani
Tuned exhaust mani
Two Temp Sensors for intake (Pre inter-cooler, post Inter-cooler)
Hopefully a bigger turbo, might be VNT
Oh ya, and body work...and some new paint.
Not much but when you do it all your self, makes it something to be proud of!
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#1
by
DarkwingDork
on 10 Feb, 2012 12:13
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Nicely done!
Of course, a project car is never really "finished" but I know what you mean. Did you mean to post a video of some dude playing Carol of the Bells on a cello, or was that supposed to be a video of the car?
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#2
by
Helliouse
on 10 Feb, 2012 12:31
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lmao
was sending that to my wife...will fix
Thanks!
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#3
by
8v-of-fury
on 10 Feb, 2012 12:36
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I must ask, why the 100psi fuel pump???
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#4
by
Helliouse
on 10 Feb, 2012 12:43
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I bought it to replace my Mothers (PD in tank crapped out), needed something until a new in tank showed up. Seeming it was kicking a round I threw it on. I didn't really do it for any performance reasons, it is mostly to keep fuel cycling through to keep the parts cool. Read some where that pushing the fuel through doesn't hurt, for cooling reasons.
I have noticed it helps with starts, primes the injection pump quite nicely.
I am also wondering if is a 100 psi, I can't remember now, it was the only pump I could get my hands on quickly that would keep up with the flow of my Mom's PD. I think as a result is can hit 100. I would have to look at the box.
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#5
by
8v-of-fury
on 10 Feb, 2012 12:45
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Of course it will help with pushing the fuel, but I think 100psi is just a tad to high.. like 90-95psi too high lol.
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#6
by
DarkwingDork
on 10 Feb, 2012 12:58
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Lolz! I kinda figured
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#7
by
Helliouse
on 10 Feb, 2012 12:58
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I am pretty sure that pump can't hit it, I think the chart I seen for it had some very specific numbers, line size etc to hit 100 PSI.
I will have to dig out the part number and check.
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#8
by
Helliouse
on 10 Feb, 2012 16:11
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I do have a warning for anyone working on this engine.
Be very, very careful about pulling your oil gallery plug, above the intermediate shaft. The machine shop that worked on my bock pulled the rear plug, and once replaced it leaked like a no one business. The oil pressure pushed the plug out, they use a imperial plug.
I looked online, check this form, found a online store Techonic Tuning (sp), bought what they offered as the properly sized item...once again didn't fit.
At this point I was very, very good at pulling my engine, and putting it back it...also fairly short tempered!
My solution...Drill the whole out, tap it with 3/8 - 18 NTP tap, and plug the B....
No more leaking. You want stress though... Used a lot of grease, slowly drilled it out, very slowly... and very slowly tapped it.
Moral, talk to your engine shop and make sure they can replace the plug properly if they pull it. I know it's a good idea to pull it when tanking the block. but make damn sure they can plug it. Nothing so much fun as fighting with a leak for 3 weeks, that never should have happened.
The shop I used is probably the only shop you can use in central Alberta, sad that happened.
Brad
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#9
by
GTiTDi
on 11 Feb, 2012 00:13
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I do have a warning for anyone working on this engine.
Be very, very careful about pulling your oil gallery plug, above the intermediate shaft. The machine shop that worked on my bock pulled the rear plug, and once replaced it leaked like a no one business. The oil pressure pushed the plug out, they use a imperial plug.
I looked online, check this form, found a online store Techonic Tuning (sp), bought what they offered as the properly sized item...once again didn't fit.
At this point I was very, very good at pulling my engine, and putting it back it...also fairly short tempered!
My solution...Drill the whole out, tap it with 3/8 - 18 NTP tap, and plug the B....
No more leaking. You want stress though... Used a lot of grease, slowly drilled it out, very slowly... and very slowly tapped it.
Moral, talk to your engine shop and make sure they can replace the plug properly if they pull it. I know it's a good idea to pull it when tanking the block. but make damn sure they can plug it. Nothing so much fun as fighting with a leak for 3 weeks, that never should have happened.
The shop I used is probably the only shop you can use in central Alberta, sad that happened.
Brad
That is a shame. I am guessing that may be where the black spot below your bumper came from?
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#10
by
Helliouse
on 13 Feb, 2012 16:56
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yes one of the spots! Had a leak from the Valve cover as well.
Drove it a good 200KM this weekend, with no issues. I was enjoying driving it! Highway 2 up here was a lot of fun.
I have to remount my water temp sensor, to get a better reading, not sure what its at.