To my irritation, one of the return fuel lines was not hooked up when I picked up the rig from Hall's Engines in Moreno Valley. It was an easy fix. While I was in there, I replaced a few other rubber lines that looked old. I like fresh rubber, especially considering the wide variety of dry rot my 1973 VW Bug suffered from after sitting for a decade in the previous owner's garage. When my dad and I swapped vehicles so that I could take his Nissan pickup truck on my honeymoon (to haul my and Mrs.'s bikes up to Mammoth Lakes), the Bug's right rear tire blew out, even though it had plenty of tread left. The side wall shredded, scraping up the rear fender with all the exposed steel belting. Not good. Whenever I can, I replace old or suspect rubber with new, without question or second thought. It ain't worth the possible hassle given the minimal cost.
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Monday, May 2, 2011
Finally got the Jeep back on Friday!
After ten months at Hall's Engine in Moreno Valley, I was able to pick it up. To my dissatisfaction, they were not, after all this time, able to get the transmission leak under control, so that's up to me to deal with later. But they did manage to get it to pass smog, the least they could do given that they rebuilt the engine.
In hindsight, I should have done things a bit differently, perhaps finding a different builder or a less expensive one. I get the feeling that after the rebuild was paid for, I was more an annoyance than a customer. So it goes. But we are moving in a few weeks to live at my parents' house in Carlsbad for a month before we can move into the new house in Yorba Linda, and now I got my Jeep back.
In hindsight, I should have done things a bit differently, perhaps finding a different builder or a less expensive one. I get the feeling that after the rebuild was paid for, I was more an annoyance than a customer. So it goes. But we are moving in a few weeks to live at my parents' house in Carlsbad for a month before we can move into the new house in Yorba Linda, and now I got my Jeep back.
Monday, May 31, 2010
Working on the tailgate
Like many FSJ owners, I had tailgate window issues. It would make a lovely popping/grinding noise whenever I put the window up. In order to get it into position, I consistently had to grab the top of the window and pull it up at least halfway while engaging the key in the tailgate. Not fun, of course. I started by dropping the window and the tailgate. I ordered a tailgate channel from BJ's last week so that when I dove in, I'd have the materials I needed.
The first step is to drop the tailgate and remove the carpet and the access panel. Just take out the fourteen screws holding the chrome metal strips in place on the carpet, and then take off the twelve that hold the access panel. Stay organized, however, because these screws are at specific lengths to avoid hitting anything of the internal workings of the tailgate itself. Here's what I found.

In the pic below, notice the two large gears with the 1 1/4" flatstock steel bars. As the motor rotates the driver's side gear, it moves the flat bars which are attached to the lifter channel via small bolts and a pair of spring-loaded washers.







I added little green grease, and now I'm done. After buttoning the tailgate back up, I had a fully compliant tailgate window. I think when I'm bored and in the mood for some quick little project, I'll open the tailgate back up and glue the plywood strips together and use some silicon adhesive to hold the plywood to the tailgate wall.
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Another run to El Mirage
Here are some videos of the kids behind the wheel at El Mirage OHV. Just click on a name to watch the video from my Photobucket account. They're each one or two minutes long but quite fun and funny. Pay particular attention to the background to get a sense of their turns and speed.

Friday, May 21, 2010
New exhaust system
When the engine was getting rebuilt at Hall's, Greg noticed that the catalytic converter wasn't heating up, which means it isn't functioning correctly. (A cat needs to get to at least 600 degrees to really work well in terms of emissions control, though they can run as hot as 1500 degrees without damage.) Unfortunately, excess heat can lead to other interesting side effects. Here's what I found when I peeked into my old converter.

Not exactly an effective set up. I'm kind of amazed that the thing passed emissions with this. How bad does one of these have to be to fail?
My new Magnaflow cat from BJ's is a great replacement for the original one. It's CARB legal, which is a requirement here in California. I know this thing is old and sucks gas, but I still want to have a clean running rig.

Since a converter change was necessary, I decided to go whole hog. Earlier this year, I'd noticed just how truly lousy the welds were at the joints of the exhaust system, including the AIR return tube from the cat back to the exhaust manifolds. Here's the 3"-to-2 1/2" neckdown transition from the Y-pipe to the cat. Ugly. I have a more elegant, or at least less messy, solution that I put into practice today on the other side of the cat, which I'll get to later. This one stays for now, however, because I will be having Hall's put on a pair of Doug Thorley headers with a 3" Y-pipe, which means this junk will be going bye-bye then.

Here's my muffler, which I've come to understand is not stock/OEM. This one is quite long (~30") and looks to be a no-name brand. For better or worse, from the cat back this thing was one big welded chunk, so I had to remove it first.



Because it's one chunk and I didn't feel like going to town on it with my Sawzall, I worked it forward, rotating the tailpipe over the rear axle and then pulling it out under the driver's side door. Easy. The cat also was simple to remove, again just an exhaust clamp holding it in place.









Swapped door locks


This morning I switched out the door locks from the driver's side and the passenger's side. The driver's side was in poor shape with the little parts where the key enters the mechanism moving around, so I pulled the retaining clips on both doors (in the far right pic), popped out the lock mechanisms, and traded them. The passenger side, since it isn't used much, was in quite good condition. While each was out, I put a little black silicon around the bezel to seal it up since the original plastic seals were shot. It was an easy fix.
Friday, May 14, 2010
Transmission pan leak and fix, round two
Didn't work with a cork gasket. I think the pan in the passenger rear corner is warped. I tried it again, draining and saving the freshly installed fluids. I added a rubber gasket plus some special Permatex RTV for transmissions. (NEVER use normal RTV on a transmission gasket because it will be dissolved by additives in the transmission oil.)
Still didn't work. I'll pull it again and hammer on the pan to try to true it up. We'll see.
For what it's worth, I'm not frustrated much by this. With the drain plug in place, it's much easier to repeatedly drop the pan as I try to get the leak fixed. I'm gettin' real good at it.
Monday, May 10, 2010
Transmission pan leak and fix
My transmission pan has been leaking way too much from the passenger side, especially since it's been sitting. Hall's offered to fix it, but I wanted to take care of it both to save the labor cost and to install a drain hole. Without a drain hole, here's how I normally have to get the oil out of the pan.

Not pretty. It just dumps out, and I hope the drain bucket catches it all. To affect change, I drilled a 1/2" hole with my nifty new drill press set to 600RPMs (slow and steady for drilling metal). It wasn't quite the right fit, so I widened it a bit. The way the drain hole adapter works is fairly simple. It's a large threaded bolt that goes through the drilled hole into the pan. A nut holds it in place, with a teflon washer on the outside for sealing. The inside of the large bolt is threaded as well, and a smaller bolt goes into that. Here's where I decided to put the hole:

This is a shot of it from the outside. Note the teflon washer. I located the hole in the front driver's side corner because I felt that area had the most clearance away from the transmission internals.

With the smaller bolt plug in place. In the upper right of the pic, note the front drive shaft.

It was a fun little project. I'd had the drain plug adapter for about a year in a box, so it was nice to finally be able to put it on.
Friday, May 7, 2010
Ran out of gas yesterday!
No pics in this one, just shame.
Background: the fuel gauge is shorting out on me (I think), so it always shows full. I'd only driven 80 miles since the last fill-up (Feb. '09), but I'd idled it quite a bit when working on the radiator and electric fan, so I must've burned through a good chunk of the tank.
Anyway...
Driving to work Thursday morning, left early to give the Jeep an easy go of it, never going above sixty. Halfway there, and it starts to stutter, fades, and then dies. My first thought is pure shock because the wiring harness and the engine rebuild were supposed to cure this kind of random engine death. But thanks to my clear fuel filter up near the carb, I was able to figure out that no fuel was flowing. Just needs some gas, so I'll ring up my wife and have her bring me some.
Of course, no cell phone.
And since I usually carry a few gallons of spare gas, the jug is sitting in the back, empty.
The Perfect Storm.
I'm evenly spaced between two freeway exits, and I cannot see nor remember where the nearest station is. So I wait.
Ten minutes later (roughly 8:15), as my karma turns, a truck for the Riverside County Transportation Commission's Freeway Service Patrol pulls up, gives me a gallon for free (no AAA required), squirts some starter fluid in the carb as I start it up, and then bids me on my way with a handshake.
I filled up at the next exit and made it to my class on time.
My Jeep rocks, the engine rolls, and I'm an occasional idiot.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Picked up the Jeep today!
I finally got to drive it home today, followed by the family in the Honda. It cruises quite nicely at 60ish, running about 2300 RPMs. The gas gauge is permanently pegged to F, so I'll have to get at that soon. Honestly, I couldn't help but smile as I was driving home. But since it now runs a bit quieter, every time I let my foot off the gas and the engine RPMs dropped, I had a momentary flash of anxiety that it was dying again. I was wrong every time, but this new, quieter and more reliable engine will take some getting used to.
I'll be driving it to work everyday for the next few weeks to get some miles on it and check the reliability of not so much the rebuilt engine but the wiring upgrades I've performed lately. All in all, I expect good things.
Here's the parts list breakdown, totalling $915.27:
- Fel Pro KS20001 Gasket Kit #FS8266PT4
- Fal Pro Valley Pan Gasket #96001
- Sealed Power Cam Kit #KC646
- Sealed Power Piston Kit #W362NP
- Sealed Power Rod Bearings #3310CPA
- Sealed Power Lifters #HT2011
- Sealed Power Main Bearing #5037M
- Sealed Power Ring Set #301K
- Sealed Power Brass Freeze Plugs #381-2170
- Sealed Power #UK 17412 Hard
- Stant Thermostat #13008
- Oil Filter #61626
- 7 Quarts of Oil
- 1 Gallon Coolant
3 Year/Unlimited Miles Warranty
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Rebuild update
I got a call from Greg at Hall's Engines today. Everything is going to plan except for one glitch: unfortunately, I bought the wrong shorty headers from Summit Racing (no AIR tubes, which means the engine would never pass smog with them installed). Instead, Greg will put the OEM exhaust manifolds back on, and then when I return in 500 miles or so for the engine checkup and oil change, he'll slap on the right headers (which I'll try to order today from BJ's Off-Road), take it to a local guy he knows to get it smog certified (tuned as needed to pass), and then get it back to me.
At any rate, it's a minor setback because the engine should be back in the Jeep tomorrow and ready for testing. I'm not sure if I'll be able to pick it up Friday before the family heads to Carlsbad or if it'll have to wait until Monday.
I've had nothing but positive interaction with Greg so far, and I'm still quite confident that I found the right guy to get the job done right the first time.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
The engine rebuild begins ... but not by me
I dropped the Jeep off at Hall's Engine Rebuilding and Radiator Service in Moreno Valley this morning. It performed nicely on the freeway, but I'm sure I left a Hansel and Gretel trail of oil between our house and the engine shop since the rear main seal is leaking like a sieve. As I get updates from the shop, I'll post them here.
The plan right now is to tear the entire engine apart; get the block decked, honed, and bored; check the valves for undue wear and replace the springs; replace the cam, the pistons, and the rings will stock spec parts; machine the piston arms back to true and install new bearings; replace the oil pump, the water pump, the timing chain, and so on; and install all new gaskets, belts and hoses, of course.
I took in a few parts that I'd bought in advance:
· Edelbrock Short Headers for the AMC 360 V8 to replace the stock exhaust manifolds (I'm hoping to squeeze out a few more horsepower from this upgrade)
· Edelbrock Timing Chain set for AMC 360 V8 (it's a higher quality chain with roller bearings)
· Flow Kooler hi-flow aluminum water pump for AMC 360 V8 (30% higher flow over stock)
· New polyurethane motor mounts (1 pair)
They'll pull the engine and reinstall it, which they prefer to do to make sure the setup is right and to assume all control (and liability) for proper installation. Also, though I'd bought most of the necessary gaskets in advance, the owner of the shop advised me to let him purchase and install the gaskets (nearly all will be Fel-Pro) as an insurance policy for both of us. See, the engine, upon completion, will have a three year, unlimited mile warranty. But should one of the gaskets I provided prove to be faulty, there would be the potential for debate over who should pay (was it a gasket problem or an install problem, my fault or his?). If it's one of his gaskets, he's responsible for all parts and labor.
Also, another nice service Hall's provides is a free checkup after 500 miles. They'll do an oil change and check the engine over, including all connections, to make sure all is well. If something is wrong (problematic metal shavings in the oil, for example), they can address it before anything catastrophic happens.
All of the above is what sold me on using Hall's. In addition to that, however, is the fact that they specialize in off-road vehicles and enjoy working on older Jeeps (he was working on a V6 CJ5 when I pulled in this morning, and their site has some shots of a pair of desert flatties). While these Jeeps are not going to feature the AMC 360, they're mostly AMC vehicles, so he knows what peculiarities these rigs can have.
The complete rebuild, including all parts and labor (and removal and install of the engine) will be about $3600. He says they rarely go over an estimate and are quite off under. I left a 50% deposit to get the job rolling.
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Another taillight fix
I had to return to the left taillight again. I grabbed the housing off of that same 88 GW at the PAP in San Bernardino. I think I paid two bucks for it.
Remember what I started with (before the sidemarker fix), including the body damage. It's actually somewhat surprising that the taillight housing wasn't more damaged that this. Just that little one inch chunk missing. But my other concern, now that I had replaced the sidemarker light, I wanted to get the entire driver's side rear more waterproof than it was.

I had to pull the interior left panel in the cargo compartment to get at the two nuts holding the housing in place. Since the donor rig was already gutted back there, it was easy to see how it was attached, which made this job much easier on my rig.

The red taillight lens was slightly damaged, as well, so I took some time to get it glued up with some silicon adhesive, guaranteed to remain intact even when exposed to moisture and heat.

The taillight lens and housing back together, wired up, and ready to go. Before I put the lens in, however, I put some clear silicon in the housing grooves where the lens mates up. Again, water tight is the phrase of the day.

The real challenge was plugging the gap between the housing and the body panel since they were not and never would be, um, shall we say symmetrical. First, I cut up the rubber sole on an old running shoe. I shaped it like an L, as if it would fit between the top edge and outside edge of the taillight housing and the body panel. No go. Then I found some spare insulator tubing that I had leftover from when I installed my house's water heater a few years back (I get rid of very little until it truly resembles garbage). I flattened it against the outside and top edges, pushed the housing into the body panel, and tightened down the nuts. It's a great fit.
Friday, April 9, 2010
New plug wires, cap, and rotor
About a year ago, I bought a set of 8mm plug wires from Accel to upgrade my wiring, trying to avoid as much parasitic loss and heat as I could. The problem, unfortunately, was that the plugs I bought required male rather than female connectors on the distributor cap, so I couldn't use them. Rather than return them, I kept the wires to force me to find a solution at some point. So I've been running this style cap for the life of the Jeep.

Then, through another member of IFJSA (GetLost4x4), I learned about a rather simple upgrade/fix for the male/female connectors on the cap. See, the Duraspark distributor is a Ford product, and GetLost used a larger cap and rotor that would normally go on a '79 Ford F-350 which ran essentially the same distributor. The setup begins with a mounting adapter that allows a 5" diameter cap on a ~3 1/2" diameter distributor.

Then the new cap and plugs can be mounted on there, getting me the male connectors on the cap. Basically, the cap is ultimately the same height as the original, just wider, which helps cut down on potential crossfire situations.

Done. Getting the plugs on the end of the wires (the kit was a do-it-yourself setup to customize the wire length) was easily the hardest task in this project. I strongly recommend a good pair of crimping pliers ($20 for a nice Vice Grip tool with three or so crimping options). This is just one more way of improving the wiring efficiency and reliability in the engine bay. Never a mistake to do that.

Sunday, April 4, 2010
Wiring harness--finished and running!
Double checked all connectors today, particularly around the alternator, the starter relay, and the firewall/bulkhead connection. Tightened everything down that I could. At first, it wouldn't start because it had been so long since I'd run the rig, but after a few minutes, it started up, to my great relief. But...
Then she wouldn't shut off, even with the key out of the ignition! Oops. I thought I'd created some kind of perpetual energy machine. Or, as my dad put, I'd learned how to hotwire a car (the slowest way possible).
Turns out, the old harness didn't have a clearly defined (+) line to the coil (it was lost in that awful bird's nest of wiring by the AC condensor). So when I installed the new harness, I had two hots going to the (+) side, including initially straight to the battery and not to a switched source. I've since rectified that, losing the old hot wire and keeping the new.
Installing the engine wiring harness
The first task was taking pictures of the old one, including all connectors. I wanted to mark on the new one exactly what went where before I disconnected anything. A number of photographs, blue tape, and a Sharpie made it an easy, if long.

Here's a nasty reminder of what I was trying to improve. The stuff on the fair left is the new electric fan relay. The junk in the middle is standard fair--cracked, unprotected, poorly organized/routed, and potentially dangerous.

This is what I did to the new harness as I disconnected the hold. I marked each extension and measured to see roughly where the "branches" should shoot off from the "main trunk" of the harness, if that makes sense. A significant amount of my zip-ties from the initial clean up job had to go away to allow for more efficient routing of the offshoots, but that wasn't a big deal.
I started with the bulkhead connection and the wound it back behind the engine along the firewall (there are a pair of mounting points made for zipties back there).

I wanted to keep it off of the valve covers and the intake manifold, basically the main heat sources on top of the engine. I then routed it around towards the passenger fender where the starter relay is. The main harness branches off there to go to the coil, carb, AC, and distributor. I took the time, as well, to clean up the wiring for the electric cooling fan. It's not great, but the wires will be kept together and are less like to fray this way.

I kept as much of the wiring bundled there as I could to keep the area clean. All done...

Friday, April 2, 2010
"New-to-me" headliner in today, plus sunvisors
While the headliner was out for the roof rack, I decided that I might as well upgrade the headliner itself if I could (one of the previous owners was a smoker because I can't figure out how a liner could get so faded unless he was a smoker or was driving everywhere upside down.) So a trip back to that same PAP got me the donor rig's two piece liner, some trim pieces, and a pair of much nicer sunvisors.
Old vs. New-ish


Quite a difference, obviously. Installation was pretty simple. Lily and Nath helped hold it in place while I got it up and in the rail slots down the side. Then it was just a matter of reinstalling the trim pieces and the visors. To finish it up, I drilled some holes through the liner above the wheel wells to reinstall the three-point seat-belts for kiddies.
All done.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Spruced up the "new" wiring harness
I wanted to upgrade my engine's wiring harness to the new one available from BJ's Off-road, but it won't work with my year FSJ. The problem is that the various engine connectors changed so much during the late 80's as a result of AMC's penchant for using parts from a variety of different manufacturers from year to year (Ford distributors and carbs, GM ignition modules, etc.) and Chrysler's purchase of Jeep from AMC. My next best option was a used wiring harness that I could recondition before pulling my own, which is the route I went.
Zach at Z&M Jeeps in Ohio sent me a used wiring harness he pulled from an '88 GW. I was able to look it over on my dining room table and fix any cracked wires, clean the connectors, re-grease all metal prongs with dielectric, and wrap it in braided sleeving from Painless Performance. Here's what I started with:

It had plenty of old electrical tape and grime on it, but it was largely free of cracks. The few I found, I repaired with a double-ended crimp connector (don't know the technical name) and then wrapped 'em in fresh tape. Where needed to help hold a cluster of wires together at a branch off the main harness, I used some additional electrical tape. I then went nuts with Painless's Powerbraid and zip-ties. Yes, it's overdone, but I wanted it clean, tight, and manageable, all of which it now is. Nothing gets tangled, and I have confidence that it will flow juice where it needs to go on a consistent basis.

Overall, I was quite pleased with what I received from Z&M and with the clean up job I did. While I could have simply pulled mine and refreshed it, I wasn't inspired to trust it due to some wiring gremlins I'd had in the past and the nest of wires (mentioned and photographed in earlier posts) between the alternator and the passenger side fender. I'll keep my old one as a hopefully unneeded backup.
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