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#1 |
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Intake
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 32
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Yeap, 1986 GA70 gen1 1GGTEu converted to manual, I'm guessing yours would have the Yamaha head also?.
1,200 American dollars?!?!?! i paid 200NZD (350NZD for a 4puk ceramic) for my clutch, there is no way to justify 1g (or 2g in NZD ) on a clutch replacement. The job is piss basic and i recommend you do it yourself (if you have atleast an ounce of lego experiance ), half a dozen bolts on the bellhousing, 2 on the starter, take off the drive shaft hanger bearing pull out Dshaft, Pull out the center console (4 screws i think?) undo the gearstick, unbolt your slave cylinder, put jack under box take off the rear X member, hold the box steady wriggle it backwards as someone lowers the box down on the jack. (may need to move your exhaust slightly, my custom one gets in the way, not sure about factory).Undo the half dozen bolts on the P/P take it off, pull out clutch, replace clutch , replace release bearing, replace p/p, and repeat the steaps i said above in reverse Easy as pie, takes me about 1hr to 1.5hrs. Theres a few triks involved in lining up the clutch splines and the gbox input spline, but it mostly takes patience.While your there i'd replace the crank seal and the seal in the main input seal on the gbox. For technical information on them, its not hard to find, just visit any Australian or New Zealand supra sites. We have a fair few running around. |
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#2 |
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Stock
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: edmonton,ab,ca
Posts: 12
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i've never done anything like that before..
and i'm not too sure i have the right tools, and it'll be about 1,200 CND $$$'s and i'm scared, i won't notice if theres anything else wrong when im in there.. |
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#3 |
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Intake
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 32
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Thats $1872.60 NZD (woe is our dollar at the moment).
Thats over 3 times the amount we pay in NZ for a complicated clutch replacement. I suggest getting a workshop manual (go to your library) or a mate with some knowledge and give it a crack, even if you have to buy a complete set of tools (5/8ths socket set and a decent ring spanner set) it'll work out cheaper, and you'll keep the tools and experiance for life ![]() But i have always been the one to jump in and find out by pulling things apart first and consider the consequences later.
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#4 |
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Stock
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: edmonton,ab,ca
Posts: 12
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yeah i know what you mean i do that with computers, but then again i don't put my life in the hands of a notebook,
i just wanted it done right, but i am going down there tomorrow to watch and see how its done, and maybe the next time it blows i'll take a crack at it.. on another note, the guy at the shop said the compression test went very very well, everything in, around, and on the engine is mint, and he's checking the traNNY tomorrow, sofar we have two thumbs up, ( the body-no rust at all, and compleatly straight, and the engine, so things are looking good except for the new tires i need and the clutch |
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