Everything posted by chaseincats
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280z Rear Strut Spacer?
Sorry if I'm not explaining my question well. What I am asking is if I put 4 of the standard strut mount insulators in and ignore their 260/280z-only rear insulator spacer (or any other donut/etc spacer) in there, will the rear wheel gap (good call on that metric) be greater than, less than, or equal to the wheel gap in the front?
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280z Rear Strut Spacer?
It sounded like from your post/the fsm pic that adding their spacer to get back to 'stock' ride height for the 280 gave it a rake out of the factory where the body was higher in the back than the front and not using the spacer would get you/us a level-sitting car, no?
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280z Rear Strut Spacer?
Gotcha, so in this case, to have a level car like a 240/260/any other car, the spacer isn't needed.
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280z Rear Strut Spacer?
Since they increased the ride height on the rear of the car for the 280 means that when it was sold new it had a bit of a rake to it where the rear was higher than the front then?
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280z Rear Strut Spacer?
Hi guys, I was reading that the 280z's rear strut mount was higher than teh 240's and requires a spacer (this part). If I don't add this to the car, does that mean the front will sit higher than the rear or did the 280z have a rake to it when new?
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Not quite overheating
Good catch, I should have added that I did pressure test the cooling system and radiator cap when I installed all of that new hardware a few months ago. I also did a leak-down test yesterday and besides finding out I have a few tired piston rings, I confirmed there isn't any combustion gas leaking into the coolant.
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Not quite overheating
The car has a new radiator and water pump and before I did that, I flushed out the rust (in theory) with the radiator flush chemical a few times and did the old 'hose in the thermostat housing' routine.
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Not quite overheating
I've heard from a bunch of sources that the smaller opening of the aftermarket thermostats compared to the OEM one (and apparently now this) hinders cooling. That's the case at least (probably) on my car.
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Not quite overheating
I'll give that a shot, thanks! Has anyone tried this thermostat in a world where the OEM one is NLA?
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Not quite overheating
Update for you guys. I spoke with my old Z mechanic and he said (and I've heard from a couple folks on Z forums too) that aftermarket thermostats don't flow as much coolant as an OEM one. Has anyone else here heard of this or is it more of a wives tale? I took my old Nissan OEM thermostat and popped it in a pot of water and the 170 degree thermostat didn't start opening until 185ish so I'm guessing that was bad and the new one which is aftermarket isn't large enough to flow enough coolant for a steady temp. Can anyone recommend a 170 degree thermostat that flows as much coolant as an OEM one? Currently the thermostat I have is this.
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Fuel Pump Ground Location?
Hi all - Wondering if anyone knows where the fuel pump ground wire terminates in the car. The pump has two wires going into the wiring loom but the service manual says one of them terminates directly to a ground. Any idea where that hides on a 1978?
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Muffler/resonator question
Hi all, I just put a Dynomax SuperTurbo 17733 on my stock 280 and it is noticeably quieter than the (what turned out to be magnaflow) muffler that was sawed off. I took a look under the car (no cat) and I believe the below is a resonator (correct me if I'm wrong). Do these need to be removed when using the SuperTurbo muffler? The car is almost EV quiet after swapping the magnaflow with this.
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Not quite overheating
Gotcha, so I shouldn't expect the temp to drop if I do that then? Yep, I have the shroud
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Not quite overheating
drops back to operating temp
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Not quite overheating
Heater is good. I do have an aftermarket thermostat installed not OEM Nissan if that matters. The original thermostat I had in there was OEM but the overheating issue also happened with that in there. Next time I drive the car and it heats up I'll raise the idle and see what happens but either way that should test airflow and coolant flow since it would be spinning the pump and fan faster, right?
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Not quite overheating
When this whole thing started I changed the fan clutch, radiator (kept the fan shroud), water pump, thermostat, and used radiator flush so it shouldn't be any of those components...
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Not quite overheating
Update on this. I noticed the car is now only heating up after getting to operating temperature and then driving slowly/idling. Once the car is driving, the temperature drops like a stone which kills my theory about combustion gas in the coolant. They car will puff some white (not blue) smoke when changing gear under WOT so I'm guessing that means the gasket is somewhat compromised in the coolant passages anyway. The car has a brand new Aisin fan clutch which had the same warming-up issue that developed with the old fan clutch which was in good condition anyway. I checked the fan belt's tension and it was good as-is too. Any other ideas?
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Not quite overheating
Update on this. I noticed a few weeks ago that the temp gauge briefly rises when I really hit the pedal and will fall when I drop the idle. That lead me to believe theres combustion gas sneaking into the coolant. Following the directions, I siphoned out a few inches of coolant from the radiator and after about 20 seconds of pumping, the squeeze pump stopped expanding because I was probably pulling coolant into the tester at that point. Because of this, I was unable to do a full 2 minute squeeze test. My question is, can I squeeze the pump until its hard to squeeze, pop it out of the radiator to drop the coolant level back down (now that its no longer under vacuum from the bottle) so I can keep squeezing (as long as I dont squeeze the bulb when I pop it out) or will that contaminate the test? EDIT: I grabbed my transfer pump and sucked enough coolant out of the radiator to fill my overflow bottle (it was about 1/8 full). That gave me more air to pump out of the rad and the color didn't change. My only guess at this point is the leak in the head/head gasket (if that's the issue) is so small that the only time it gets enough gas to heat the car up is when theres more pressure in the cylinders due to higher rpm. I think the plan will be to just drive it until it's bad enough that it heats up at idle and try the test again.
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Improve cold start time?
The main efi relay had some resistance so maybe the efi system wasnt getting full power? My main guess is the fuel pump relay had resistance, so maybe it took a little bit longer for power to push its way through the corrosion to turn the pump on? Who knows - all I do know is everyone should test the relays for resistance. The only reason I resurected this old thread was for that PSA haha
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Improve cold start time?
I cleaned 2 things - 1) the "teeth" that sit outside of the relay housing (the things that plug into the harness). After cleaning the teeth I took resistance measurements between the circuits. For example (I didn't need to clean this one but it's easy to explain this way) - the fuel pump control relay has 4 teeth. By activating the relay by touching a 9v battery to the left 2 of the 4 teeth the relay will click, I then measured the resistance of the high power circuit (the side which is actuated by the relay itself) 2) if resistance is found (anything over 0.02ish on the multimeter's ohm setting), I opened up the relay by bending the locking prongs back to pull the top of it off. Once open you'll see 2 contacts and rocker looking like this: \ |/ when actuated, the relay arm will shift to \| /. For relays that had resistance, there ALWAYS was some sort of black marks either on the contact side \ / or the relay rocker arm side | Using sandpaper i cleaned them all up and took another measurement confirming there was no more resistance. Top tip: the screw at the bottom of each relay has nothing to do with opening the casing, it screws the relay electrics to the bottom plastic base. Unscrew that screw to pull the articulating arms out of the contacts, it makes it WAY easier to clean both sides that way and screws back in easily.
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Improve cold start time?
Long term update. It wasn't the injectors and for the hotter part of the summers that followed, I had the long cold starting issue. A few months back I added a manual switch in the cabin to bypass the Thermotime switch to get the car to start up on crank 1 or 2 regardless of weather which is awesome and works like a charm. That said, I replaced my fuel pump a week or so ago due to it being old as heck and pooping out once. While the car ran great once started, it still had that long cranking issue when it was hot out. I took the relay bracket out and cleaned the teeth of all of them then used a multimeter set to resistance (ohm) and checked the circuits from the teeth and low-and-behold found resistance. I pried open the relays that had resistance (fuel pump and main EFI relay - the fuel pump control relay was fine) and found black corrosion on the relay's rocker arms and tabs they connect to once triggered. After cleaning all of that off, I took another ohm measurement and got basically 0. I put them back in the car a few days later and without using the what I started calling the 'quick start switch' the car roared to life on crank 3. I was absolutely floored. All that to say, take your relay bracket out and take some ohm measurements of the circuits in each relay (after cleaning the teeth with a dremel wire brush or something). If you find anything but "0.02" or below resistance, pry them open and sandpaper off the black corrosion which is no doubt there.
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Acceleration Stumble
Is there any possibility this is ECU related, and if so how would he test it?
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Oil pressure sending unit leaking
Thanks I'll give this a shot. I have teflon tape laying around so that should do it then.
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Oil pressure sending unit leaking
Was trying to track down a leak and I think I've narrowed it down to oil sneaking out of the threads of the oil pressure sending unit. The unit works great outside of the small leak. Is there an o-ring between it and the block that has gone bad or do they seal to the block in a different way?
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Acceleration Stumble
Thanks for writing this all up, I'll try and answer them individually No leaks - we've smoked and sprayed it multiple times EFI temp sensor is brand new and in spec Every cylinder is firing spark and fuel (pulled spark plug wires 1 at a time then did the same with the injector power connectors Last time we checked we set it at 10 but even when it was higher as we were setting it the stumble remained The car sounds like its much more similar to your situation since its not bogging/missing it just doesnt want to rev and WILL pop loudly out of the intake if you press the accelerator all the way down and hold it at idle