We fixed our problem! So stoked.
This is the auto choke mechanism.
There's a plunger inside that opens and closes the choke based on coolant temperature. Ours was staying permanently open so when the car was warm it was running really rich and hunting.
We manually closed the choke and had the car idling beautifully. The idle step up with headlights on also worked properly.
After testing the auto choke in a bowl of hot water the plunger was definitely working. Trouble is, when fitted in the car we weren't getting coolant to the little bowl at the bottom of the choke mechanism, which is where the plunger operates from. So it constantly thought the car was cold and needed choke.
Next step was to clear the coolant hoses and then bleed the coolant system again. Felt great to have the issue diagnosed!
This is from our test of the auto choke after giving it a good clean up. It's really hard to tell in this photo, but that little domed bit in the middle is the bit that moves up when the coolant is hot and seals against the inside of the black donut shaped piece. It's closed in this pic.
It was easy to mimic a closed choke by sealing it at idle with a finger. That's how we set the idle speed and managed to diagnose the issue.
Yesterday we finished the job. Gotta say, getting to the bottom of the issue was hugely satisfying. I was genuinely worried about how long it could take. But no more!
It was one of those rare days where you give it a crack and it just works. Very little fussing about and a perfect result straight away. Great feels!
After cleaning and flushing out the coolant channels we filled the auto-choke circuit with as much coolant as possible to get rid of the air before we closed it all up. From the moment it fired you could tell it was running better. The cold start was stable and dropped from ~2000rpm it used to be down to ~1500rpm. I took it for a quick spin around the block and revs dropped to a perfect 650rpm idle, which is Honda spec.
Went for another run after that to get video. Such dose!
Threw the passenger seat in and Tony took another mate for a lap.
So that's basically everything sorted with the engine rebuild! We've got to fit a new engine mount which is sitting at the post office, then we can put the airbox back in and call it done.
Next on the list is the interior and then exterior. We got started on the interior today.
Getting rid of the sound deadening so we can refit the dashboard.
It's not pretty, but it will all be hidden anyway.
Cleaned up dash and the A/C evaporator box fitted with all its insides gutted. It needs to be there for the normal fan blower to get air from outside. Should work well like this.
Next step was preparing the dashboard to go black. One of the wrecks we stripped parts from has contributed a bunch of factory black dash bits, but the stuff individual to this Japanese model is getting vinyl dyed.
Looks pretty damn good! I did this in another car years ago and was happy with it. Can't wait to see it installed.
We ran out of time to fit the dash after dying it today, but later this week we should have an update.
Thanks for the info, mate. We found out that MY08-11 Subaru Impreza diff bushes are a perfect fit for the engine mount we need to replace. We've got a Whiteline replacement on the way so that should sort that out. Very keen to have that fixed.
This is the auto choke mechanism.
There's a plunger inside that opens and closes the choke based on coolant temperature. Ours was staying permanently open so when the car was warm it was running really rich and hunting.
We manually closed the choke and had the car idling beautifully. The idle step up with headlights on also worked properly.
After testing the auto choke in a bowl of hot water the plunger was definitely working. Trouble is, when fitted in the car we weren't getting coolant to the little bowl at the bottom of the choke mechanism, which is where the plunger operates from. So it constantly thought the car was cold and needed choke.
Next step was to clear the coolant hoses and then bleed the coolant system again. Felt great to have the issue diagnosed!
This is from our test of the auto choke after giving it a good clean up. It's really hard to tell in this photo, but that little domed bit in the middle is the bit that moves up when the coolant is hot and seals against the inside of the black donut shaped piece. It's closed in this pic.
It was easy to mimic a closed choke by sealing it at idle with a finger. That's how we set the idle speed and managed to diagnose the issue.
Yesterday we finished the job. Gotta say, getting to the bottom of the issue was hugely satisfying. I was genuinely worried about how long it could take. But no more!
It was one of those rare days where you give it a crack and it just works. Very little fussing about and a perfect result straight away. Great feels!
After cleaning and flushing out the coolant channels we filled the auto-choke circuit with as much coolant as possible to get rid of the air before we closed it all up. From the moment it fired you could tell it was running better. The cold start was stable and dropped from ~2000rpm it used to be down to ~1500rpm. I took it for a quick spin around the block and revs dropped to a perfect 650rpm idle, which is Honda spec.
Went for another run after that to get video. Such dose!
Threw the passenger seat in and Tony took another mate for a lap.
So that's basically everything sorted with the engine rebuild! We've got to fit a new engine mount which is sitting at the post office, then we can put the airbox back in and call it done.
Next on the list is the interior and then exterior. We got started on the interior today.
Getting rid of the sound deadening so we can refit the dashboard.
It's not pretty, but it will all be hidden anyway.
Cleaned up dash and the A/C evaporator box fitted with all its insides gutted. It needs to be there for the normal fan blower to get air from outside. Should work well like this.
Next step was preparing the dashboard to go black. One of the wrecks we stripped parts from has contributed a bunch of factory black dash bits, but the stuff individual to this Japanese model is getting vinyl dyed.
Looks pretty damn good! I did this in another car years ago and was happy with it. Can't wait to see it installed.
We ran out of time to fit the dash after dying it today, but later this week we should have an update.
Originally posted by Setanta
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