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Dodgeb4ya

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Everything posted by Dodgeb4ya

  1. I enjoyed your fun and entertaining video! Other than never liking red silicone sealant your video was 100% awesome? Thanks for posting and let's see more!??
  2. Nice work!
  3. The only thing that bothered me was that awful nasty red silicone sealant. Could have at least used black.
  4. Another tidbit.....Vacumn type Vacamatic. The trans shown has the six sided shift diaphragm. Later builds were updated piston type shift.
  5. Definitely if the pump cover shows signs of leaking replace the oil pump cover gasket....a square profile rubber O- ring. Don't let the outer rotor pump gear fall out. The smaller inner rotor gear cannot fall out. The outer rotor gear needs to stay assembled exactly as is...meaning you could put the rotor gear in face up two ways. Those two gears have a good wear in pattern ...you do not want to change it....otherwise possibly causing slightly lower oil pressure.
  6. I'd use your old one...it will not fail. New chinese will. I would not even take it apart unless sludgy.
  7. Washington used the engine number at least thru the middle 50's.
  8. Sometimes a very hard part to find OE. Just use an internal snap ring using 90 degree snap ring pliers.
  9. Looks like this....sometimes I've seen just the ring portion in the groove of the torque shaft. I think because the "ears" of the clip are broken off.
  10. A retaining spring clip fits in a groove of the torque shaft on the frame side of said shaft.
  11. Old jeeps, AMC cars..really old AMC Ramblers and a host of other cars and trucks had tapered axles. Brake shops and regular repair shops had these drums off quickly...no fooling around...good tooling ...knowledgeable mechanic. Get'er done....the customer needs their car next day. Diy'er newbies might take a week or more for some to get two drums off. Just the way it goes first time. I started on these type drums and axles when I was sixteen. Never waited for them to pop. I got them off just like the old guy up the street did them. He had a pretty good sized hammer and seemed like a strong old man. He taught me and now I'm just like him? I've removed hundreds of tapered axle style drums from the small Plymouth's to the big V12 Packards. All good exercise too.
  12. I started having rotating pic issues about two months ago. Using the cell phone pictures and also using pics stored on my win 10 desktop. Never ever had an issue. Anyway I would edit/ rotate ..do a small resize and save it. Come here to post the pic...it would end up sideways, upside down...crazy!!!! Read on this issue endlessly. Exif data on and on. Finally out of frustration I post pic....delete it... re-post it and then magically it posts properly. These can be pictures I have posted on this site with no problems before. Anyway I will try to get the picture right two try's after that it will be posted any orientation that happens. Frustrated to the point where I don't care anymore.?
  13. Don't be cheap on an auto darkening helmet...that's your eyes it's protecting.... I looked, talked a lot to welder supply houses and the guys at the welding shop before I bought one. I've had my helmet now for over 15 years and no issues at all. It cost me $450.00. Oh yeah $$$$... but to me it was worth it. As for welding inside....nope.. I do it all outside...sparks run 20+ feet. Don't want a fire. Read too many stories on welding sparked fires in the garage.
  14. Hylomar....re-useable, expensive, for close fit applications like machined case halves etc. I've sealed leaks on valve covers no one else could. Goes on super thin...great sealant. Ultra grey like Honda bond another wonderful gasket "maker"...on and on just like which oil should I use... But dry gaskets don't leak either in the right applications. You pick....better not leak!
  15. Are ya sure you are not trying to get rich? That's your name !?
  16. RTV probably has destroyed thousands of engines over the years from improper usage. But...now days that's how many engines, transmissions and rear axles are sealed up from the factory. If you use it do it right and sparingly. Ya don't want the oil pick up half plugged up.? Sealers can also cause gaskets of some types to "squirt" out of position and fail.
  17. Those orange box old Carter kits are the real deal to use. There are two versions.. A very very complete kit and then the standard quick rebuild kit with the needed parts kit for a typical rebuild. The Kits sold today consist of pretty much a couple styles of needle and seats, accelerator pump, couple small balls and a pile of gaskets for four different Carter BB carbs. Some new kits might include a new mixture screw too.
  18. Wish the video wasn't private.?
  19. A sample out of a 2005 RI harness catalog P15...early/ late changes in harness options depending on serial#.
  20. Be careful to note where the horn relay is located.. Early or late model p15's have the horn relay mounted in different places...in front of the radiator drivers side and or drivers side inner fender panel...requires a different harness. I don't remember if RI lists more than one production model change...call them and ask questions before ordering. Do you still have your old harness to compare old to new? Anyway RI instructions are good and clear...and the factory wiring diagram is a must too.
  21. RI is a great choice...I have installed several in 1946-52 MoPars. Better than Y&Z....weak connector and labeling issues.
  22. If using a large heavy hammer and just a jack stand you are losing a lot of impact shock through the jack stand..... If you feel the need for heat in this instance.. It needs to be hot and fast...oxy acetylene to quickly expand just the axle I beam area and not let that heat soak to the pin and expand it too. 10 minutes with mapp is heating both....won't work very well. Personally I don't like heating a critical part on steering or suspension. A good press or king pin removal tool is needed on some tough pins. A snap-on king pin tool shown. I realize most don't have these tools but some can be rented or have a shop do it. JMO.?
  23. And some more continuing good education on needle and seats... https://www.thecarburetorshop.com/Fuel_valves.htm
  24. I have never used the Daytona valves. They are nothing new and whether made of aluminum or brass thousands have been made and sold over the last 50 years or more. .
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