Torque the injectors to 51 ft lbs. make sure the shields go in the right way. attach all the hard lines but leave the injector ends a little loose until it starts, then tighten each one once it has pressure [spraying all over the place]
make sure to apply pressure going towards the head. if you pull, you'll most certainly break the injector boss. don't forget to add some anti seize to make it easier to remove in the future
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
Quote from: jtanguay on June 27, 2009, 04:50:17 pmmake sure to apply pressure going towards the head. if you pull, you'll most certainly break the injector boss. don't forget to add some anti seize to make it easier to remove in the futureI've seen this numerous times on this forum. Please explain why. The way I see it, force is force, should not matter whether you are pushing or pulling. The only difference I see is that (if you don't brace yourself and something let go), you crash head first into the hood or go flying backwards and land on your butt.
Quote from: 92EcoDiesel Jetta on July 04, 2009, 07:44:43 amQuote from: jtanguay on June 27, 2009, 04:50:17 pmmake sure to apply pressure going towards the head. if you pull, you'll most certainly break the injector boss. don't forget to add some anti seize to make it easier to remove in the futureI've seen this numerous times on this forum. Please explain why. The way I see it, force is force, should not matter whether you are pushing or pulling. The only difference I see is that (if you don't brace yourself and something let go), you crash head first into the hood or go flying backwards and land on your butt. Whenever you're tightening something on an angle like that, you're also creating a force trying to pivot your tool+injector assembly, balanced by the strength of the head. When you are pushing, this force is acting against the main body of the head itself, as you try to pivot the whole assembly about a point located at the tip of the injector.When you're pulling toward yourself, away from the engine, you're still applying that pivoting force, but now it's acting on the thinner cast aluminum outer boss of the injector socket. This boss is much weaker than the main body of the head, and the force needed to break an injector free or torque it all the way down can cause cracks where the boss joins the head. Once those cracks form, boom, broken boss.