Fire!!!
#25
haha thanks. I just put those Kazeras on and they came out WAYYY better than what I thought. It looks like the cause was a split in the feed line...which was steel braided...dont ask me. The oil then blew all over the turbo/DP and obviously ignited.
It looks at though the most expensive parts will be replacing the LC1, brake cylinder, and slave cylinder.
The rest of the pieces are small sections of wire that the electrical tape and shrouds just melted onto. So Im going to find replacement sections and just splice those in.
Any help for used or new parts specifically in the Seattle area would be a huge help. Or just any tips on here. Im going to try and have this back together, more reliable and cleaner within 2 weeks max. Thanks guys
It looks at though the most expensive parts will be replacing the LC1, brake cylinder, and slave cylinder.
The rest of the pieces are small sections of wire that the electrical tape and shrouds just melted onto. So Im going to find replacement sections and just splice those in.
Any help for used or new parts specifically in the Seattle area would be a huge help. Or just any tips on here. Im going to try and have this back together, more reliable and cleaner within 2 weeks max. Thanks guys
#27
They might have been steel braided but where they that rubber **** that summit sells When you put it all back together get the real teflon inner steel braided lines from a hydralic store it w ill be much more robust and able to take the heat and pressure alot better. Also do a coolant reroute, make a custom Intake Manifold, some cams, i would pull the motor and do a over bore with some forged internals, as well as new billet oil pump gears, a 6 speed if not so equiped now. And maybe a nice hood. + custom body pain job. Glad you didn't blow it up though man GL
#37
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Some teflon hoses:
http://www.holley.com/types/Ultra%20...-%20Kevlar.asp
http://www.holley.com/types/Ultra%20...ss%20Braid.asp
http://www.holley.com/types/Speed-Flex%20Hose.asp
http://www.russellperformance.com/au...eer_hose.shtml
http://store.summitracing.com/partde...5&autoview=sku
The ends for these hoses are different from those used on normal -AN line. When I built my turbo system I initially tried to use Teflon hose for the turbo feed, but I just couldn't seem to assemble a solid hose-end connection that I felt was adequate. Never did quite figure out why I couldn't make it work.
In the end I decided to use -4AN SS covered rubber hose. I simply looked for the one with the highest temp rating (which I believe was Russell Pro-Flex, at 350°F) and covered it with some aluminized heat-shield sleeve. As you can see from this picture (taken without the sleeve installed) the feed line passes perilously close to the downpipe. It's almost touching it, in fact. So far however, no problems. The DP itself is ceramic-coated (which does make a tremendous difference) however I suspect I'd probably be well-served to institute a periodic replacement regime as preventative maintenance. Hose is cheap compared to engine fires.
http://www.holley.com/types/Ultra%20...-%20Kevlar.asp
http://www.holley.com/types/Ultra%20...ss%20Braid.asp
http://www.holley.com/types/Speed-Flex%20Hose.asp
http://www.russellperformance.com/au...eer_hose.shtml
http://store.summitracing.com/partde...5&autoview=sku
The ends for these hoses are different from those used on normal -AN line. When I built my turbo system I initially tried to use Teflon hose for the turbo feed, but I just couldn't seem to assemble a solid hose-end connection that I felt was adequate. Never did quite figure out why I couldn't make it work.
In the end I decided to use -4AN SS covered rubber hose. I simply looked for the one with the highest temp rating (which I believe was Russell Pro-Flex, at 350°F) and covered it with some aluminized heat-shield sleeve. As you can see from this picture (taken without the sleeve installed) the feed line passes perilously close to the downpipe. It's almost touching it, in fact. So far however, no problems. The DP itself is ceramic-coated (which does make a tremendous difference) however I suspect I'd probably be well-served to institute a periodic replacement regime as preventative maintenance. Hose is cheap compared to engine fires.
Last edited by Joe Perez; 09-24-2007 at 01:22 PM.
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