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Pop N Wood

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Posts posted by Pop N Wood

  1. For the connector, I would scour a JY for a 2 wire plug in connector then solder/shrink wrap it in place.

     

    As for the gauge, how do you know the gauge is bad and not the wiring between the sender and the gauge? You have two options, either check the wiring, check the gauge or both.

     

    To check the wiring, disconnect the sender wires at both ends (the gauge and the sender). Next twist the wires together at one end. Now take your ohm meter and check 1) the resistance across the wires and 2) the resistance between one wire and a good ground point (clean metal). If there is a large (> maybe 20 ohms) between the wires, a wire is broken. If the resistance to ground is low(say less than 20 kiloohms) there is a short to ground. Either problem could kill the gauge.

     

    To check your gauge, hook it up directly to the sender with some jumper wires and hook up a battery to the power and ground. Now manually move the sender and see if the gauge responds. I would also do a check of the sender to make sure it is not shorted out to ground.

     

    I have found that most electrical problems are due to bad connectors or wires shorted out to ground. Occasionally a component fails, but probably 95% of the time it is a connector.

  2. Now in 2005 supporting the troops and the war is fairly popular so she is renouncing the Hanoi trip and moving toward what is popular today.

     

    That didn't occur to me until you mentioned it. At first I was hoping she was genuinely sorry. But now I wonder if she was looking at what happened to her partner in crime John Kerry and all that anti-war rehtoric causing the silent masses to stand up and be counted. One has to wonder if she is once again prostituting herself and looking no farther than book sales.

  3. John, what is your opinion about running camber plates on a 95% street driven vehicle? A somewhat subjective question I know. But you mentioned the different alignments you run on race only vs. street only vehicles. If I were running the street alignment, and a relatively soft street suspension, would I even need the adjustability of camber plates?

     

    Thanks.

  4. The truely amazing thing about that article is not the carb intake (or how easy it is to do), but the fact that they got over 500 HP on a crate engine with nothing more than a cam and valve spring upgrade. And it is a GM cam kit too!

     

    Really makes me rethink the whole LT1-is-cheaper idea.

  5. It's only a car, and it is now your car at that. Do what you want with it.

     

    "Cherry" M3's may go for $15K, but the fact you only paid $400 tells me it is far from cherry. Why pay big buck BMW prices for engine parts when you can make it go faster with less money? Sort of the HybridZ motto, isn't it?

     

    If you want to yuppify it you have to worry about little details like missing trim pieces. I say make it go fast and let the yuppies be damned.

  6. The 15/16 MC worked fine on my 1970. The only problem is the brake pedal didn't catch until it was a half inch from the floor. It just moved without any resistance until it hit that point.

     

    I didn't measure anything. I just lenghtened the rod until the brake pedal was catching at a good height for heel and toe driving.

     

    BTW, I upgraded to stainless steel brake lines at the same time. So once the brake pedal hits, I only get another 1/4 to 1/2 inch of movment. With SS lines the brake pedal is like stepping on a brick.

  7. Would like to hear the answer to that question myself.

     

    BUT the 15/16 MC is the one Arizonia Z car recommends for their 4 wheel disk brake kit. Maybe the Toyo calipers are larger and maybe that would make the 15/16 MC marginal, but it is hard for me to believe it would be totally inadequate.

     

    Who else is running the Toyo 4x4 brakes and what size MC is working for you?

  8. The bleeder valves should be on the top of the calipers.

     

    Even with air in the lines the pedal should not go to the floor. Maybe the plunger rod is not getting positioned correctly? I would think too long could be as bad as too short. There is also a "reaction disk" that needs to be in the brake booster. Not sure if that is an issue with the 71 booster or later ones. I remember threads with JMortenson posting in them about reaction disks falling out and the brakes not working.

     

    Try putting some clear tubing over the ends of the bleeder valves and put the other end in a jar of used brake fluid. Open the bleeders one at a time, but tighten them down to where they are just shy of finger tight. Then pump the brakes. You should see fluid coming out. When the clear tube is full of brake fluid, tighten the bleeder before removing the tube. Might have to work your way around all four wheels a couple of times to get all the air out.

     

    Hope I am not telling you anything you don't already know.

     

    BTW, if you have not already done so you really should upgrade the 71 MC to a larger 15/16 MC off a ZX. Make sure you swap the brake lines going to the MC so that the front brakes are being fed off the end of the MC with the larger reservior. The ZX and 71 MC's are reversed front to back.

     

    You have the same year Z I do, AND I have the exact same brake set up in boxes waiting to be installed. I hope to hear back what a great set up these brakes are. I have been using the ZX MC with the stock brakes for many years now.

     

    Good luck and double the number of beers.

  9. IF the CG of the Z is low enough (close to the height of the rear axle), it will not contribute much to front wheel lift force. By squatting, the CG of the car gets even lower and may even have the reverse effect, pushing the front wheels down.

     

    That would only be true if the CG was pushed below the centerline of the rear axles.

     

    Push on the corner of an object and it will try to spin about the CG. The farther the corner is from the CG, the greater the torque and the more the object will try to spin. Push the object directly toward's it's CG and it will move, but not spin (rotate).

     

    So if the car squats so much the CG drops in line with the rear axles, no rotation, no lift, just straight line acceleration.

     

    Longer wheel base cars have an advantage in that the CG is farther in front of the rear wheels. This torque counteracts the rotation torque applied by the rear wheels.

  10. I have both a standard, stock type retractable 3 point harness and a Simpson 5 point harness in my car. My 1970 had the non-retractable type belts originally. I would NOT recommend trying to use those on the street. The latch mechanism falls down between the seat and the trans tunnel (and is a beotch to get a hold of). The non-retractable part is as restrictive as the Simpson 5 point.

     

    Try to do like others suggested and get retractable set up out of another vehicle and adapt it to your car. I managed to get the belts out of an old Mazda 808 and mounted the retracter mechanizm on the stock 1970 belt mounting point above the rear quarter window. The big plus is the Mazda had the latching mechanism mounted on a metal post to hold it up at seat level.

     

    If you have a roll bar perhaps you can weld a lug of some type to allow mounting the retractor up high.

     

    Just a thought

  11. Man don't start out so complicated. Chances are your float is stuck or you have some dirt on the needle valve. The fuel is coming out of the overflow tube because the needle valve is not shutting it off.

     

    Try a little "mechanical agitation" to knock the dirt loose. Worse case pull the top of the carb, clean out the bowl and inspect the needle valve/float assembly for damage. Make sure everything moves without restriction.

     

    Fuel pressure regulator....sheesh.

  12. I bought a turbo that was hyped to be used on a BBC' date=' but turned out to be made for a large diesel truck. It was new and the price was cheap, and the seller had good feedback, but it's still useless to me. Yes, I should have done more homework, but I still feel like I was taken. Anyone here want an excessively large turbo for $400?? :wink:

     

    Davy[/quote']

     

    #2 of 20,000!

  13. BE EXTREMEMLY CAREFUL!!!! PM me and I'll give you ALL the details of what went bad on my deal and how I ended up with a $4,000 paperweight.

     

    Congratulations! 1 of 10,000!

     

    The odds are significantly higher than being victimized by a handgun, yet no one is screaming to outlaw ebay.

     

    BTW, there is a huge difference between buying $3 worth of children's clothes and an engine costing multiple thousands of dollars. The return freight makes a money back guarantee meaningless.

     

    My wife has had her ebay account stolen in the past by people trying to sell car parts. Be careful.

  14. But let me be clear on why I think SS is screwed up: Social Security is WELFARE for the rich. If we can't agree on that point' date=' then we'll just have to disagree and move on.

     

    My opinion on SS: SS is welfare for old people who didn't have the ability to save enough for their retirement. My HUGE beef with SS is that there ought to be some kind of mechanism to keep people who have huge bankrolls at retirement from collecting on SS!!!! If it is WELFARE, then the rich retiree shouldn't be getting it!!![/quote']

     

     

    Boooo. Exactly the attitude I worry about. Also, Pete, you do realize that you are "rich"?

     

    If you want to give people money based on need, then do so. But that is not the intended purpose of SS.

     

    BTW, my SS statements lead me to believe my wife would get $2400 a month toward the support of my kids should I die. That is nothing to sneeze at and it is a part of my shhort term financial planning.

     

    Also keep in mind not everyone pays SS. Railroad workers and cops (to name a few) pay into pensions and don't pay a dime of SS. Simply not fair to expect some of us to pay obscene amounts into SS and get nothing out of it while others get to keep theirs no matter what.

     

    And why should Iget penalized for having the good forture and foresight to plan for the future when others did not?

  15. Race brakes aren't for everyone I guess. The line lock does work as P brake though.

     

    Couldn't have said it better myself.

     

    The line lock does work as P brake though.

     

    If it doesn't leak down. At least that is what the guy at Arizona Z car told me when I was considering his brakes.

     

    I just usually find it easier to leave it in gear as I have been doing it with every car I have had for the last 18yrs.

     

    Just what I have done for the last 30 years. But I still like a functional hand brake.

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