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k9sar

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Posts posted by k9sar

  1. Take the 104 to 2 and head to Moncton. Turn left and head southwest on 1 until you hit Maine. Continue on 9 until you hit 95 south. Take that to Philadelphia area an pick up 276 West. Go to exit 326 and post when you get there. I'll grab a wrench, pop out of my office and change it for you. See ya in about 15 hours.

    • Like 1
  2. no need to remove the radiator, just the shroud. Unclip the lower part of the shroud, take out the 4 screws or so holding it to the radiator and remove the shroud. Then take the fan out by removing the 4(?) screws holding it to the water pump pully. That will get you the fan and clutch so you can replace it (a few screws onto the blade assembly)

  3. 23 = idle switch

    45 = injector leak

    12 = MAF

     

    Check the connector on the top of your MAF. Mine was bad and the stupid thing would make the truck run rough when the hood 'wiggles' and the cable was touching it. Open your hood, start the truck and let it idle (hopefully it runs fine at this point), then grab the wire running to the top of the MAF and give it a bit of movement. If it changes the behavior of the engine, you have a bad connection. I had a broken wire and had to rebuild the connector (at a 90 degree so it didn't hit the hood). Might just need the pins cleaned for a better connection.

  4. I see bondo

     

    Sent from my SGH-I747M using Tapatalk

     

    yea, the part by the bumper rotted completely off and all the stuff in my hiding-place fell out the bottom. Other spot was just eating through. Pop-rivet some window screen and a layer of bondo and she's good enough to pass inspection. Better sanding and a quick layer of paint to come later.

  5. Mine initially stopped working because of friction in that stupid slot that the belt runs through before coming across your shoulder. If I pulled the belt only from the retract mechanism, it would retract just fine. Solved the problem with some 2000 grit sandpaper running through the belt slot to remove the years of yuk that was built-up

    • Like 1
  6. Welcome. I agree with the prior posts about where to look (so to speak) for the smells. Any violation in the floors could allow water in and mildew to grow. Key places are under the DS and PS carpet and under both rear seats if you flip them up. Check after driving on a rainy day and see if any are damp. Water can seep through rust areas even if they look and feel reasonably solid. Once you get everything cleaned to your satisfaction, you might throw a couple dryer sheets under the rear seats to combat the stink. You could also lay strips of bacon on top of your catalytic convertor. bacon ALWAYS helps.

  7. The ones I would first do are to grab a volt meter and check the following:

    1. DCV from post to post when vehicle off (should be around 12V)

    2. DCV from post clamp to post clamp when vehicle off (should read same as test 1. If not, pull, clean and replace clamps on posts)

    3. DCV from post to post with vehicle running (should be around 14V)

    4. DCV from post clamp to post clamp when running (should be same as 3 if not, pull, clean and replace clamps on posts)

    5. DCV from post to post while trying to start (I believe it drops to 11ish volts on load)

    6. DCV from post clamp to post clamp while trying to start. If this drops to near 0 and test 5 does not, you definitely have bad connections

     

    After that, take a look at the fuseable links and even feel them after running for a bit. They should NOT be hot. excessive heat here indicates a short

     

    Good luck with your troubleshooting and please take the time to followup in this thread with your findings/solution so that others may benefit.

     

  8. are you sure the battery is good and will accept/hold a charge? Have you checked to make sure your terminal connections are good (jumping will work since you typically place the jumpers on the terminal clamps and not the terminal posts themselves (check voltage on the posts, then check voltage on the clamps) Before looking for the difficult, check the obvious. As for the alarm, I suppose it is possible to have a short but I have had many more occurrences of bad clamps than other electrical issues.

     

  9. More frame welding. Had to break into my angle iron for some areas that were too bad to patch. On a side note, molten metal dropping into your shoe doesn't hurt as much as you would think. Fortunately, the foam insole melted and the hot metal dropped away from my heel before too much damage was done. 2 small burns on my heel (mainly just black spots), a couple holes burned through my sock and 2 holes in the insole of my shoe that look like something burrowed down there.

  10. The shocks, unlike normal ones, have an electrical connection. That may be a dead giveaway. If you look in the cabin by the handbrake, there would also be a comfort/sport switch. My 95SE has/had the setup and I was so impressed by it that, when my shocks needed to be replaced, I threw away the 'adjustable' ones and put a set of Monroe's in.

     

  11. initial ticking that goes away once you get good oil pressure is a collapsed lifter. Usually goes away within 15 seconds or so of starting the truck.

    Ticking that goes away once warm is either a bad lifter (clogged or restricted) that solves once the oil is more viscous. The pathy should be on 5W-30 but 10W-40 is probably fine too.

    Ticking at the manifold could be a bad gasket, loose/broken stud, or a cracked manifold.

     

    One good way to chase it down is to use a length of tubing (1/2 inch by a few feet), stick one end in your ear and probe around with the other end to see exactly where the exhaust tick is coming from. You may also be able to see carbon buildup at the point of the leak.

     

    a loud tick from inside the valve cover that does not go away or cycles in and out (but never goes away) is a bad lifter. I have one in my drivers side (hard to get into) head and fix it with the radio volume knob. I'm sure it's not good for the rockers or cams but I've had more important things to fix.

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