Hello,
Bilson wrote:Right, no joy acquiring a jack so far. I had a pop at removing the starter anyway from underneath the van.
It's easy enough to get and to undo, but from what I could see it doesn't look like there's a clear route out out between the drive shaft etc, and more importantly back in, so I decided the best move would be to leave it there for time being. I'm guessing jacking the van up allows the motor a much simpler route to get in and out.
You need to have the van high enough to easily remove the wheel with the suspension at rest..
I would suggest that when you have the parts ready, you rent an adequate jack and axle stands..
You will be best off compressing and removing the plastic flexy tube from the heat exchanger to the body, be ready for rusty jubilee clips..
For an emergency jack I have a Lidl 3 tonne bottle jack, with 2 ready made pieces of marine ply for safety. The jack is small enough to go sideways in the under
seat compartment, and the handle length is set with a tack weld, so it does its job, fits for storage..
and is now the right length to serve as a prop for opening and closing the spare wheel hatch...
On my travels, I also found there's a noticeable amount of oil leaking from the original fuel pump, so I'd like to get that blanked off. I've been wondering if I can do this as it is, or if I'm best off doing it after dropping the oil?
I can only find blanking plates from jk though after a quick look.
If you can get the area round the pump clean, and with the pump removed get the mating face free of oil, use the blanking plate and gasket with jointing compound..
Make sure the studs are good, use new nuts and washers
The type 4 engine case was not originally designed to have mechanical fuel pump, they being fuel injection, so by a modification on the camshaft poked a pump pushrod
out to the weirdest place to site a petrol pump for the detuned 2 litre CU
They suffer from petrol in the oil when the (wait for it..) diaphragm leaks...
Also, I'm coming round to thinking I might be best off simply replacing the starter, so I can guarantee getting the van running, and look at repairing the existing one to keep as a spare.
It looks like the previous owner replaced it in 2016 (I sold the van 3 yrs ago and bought it back in May) and I don't know what starter was used, but it costed £112.
Is that the kind of price I want to be paying, seem to be some available at twice that, so just wondering how many days earnings I should be prepared to part with, and whether the one on the van would be worth trying to repair (if necessary)?
There's one form Euro Car Parts for a round £120, the brand is rtx but the picture shows bosch tabs on it. Any particular brands to look out for/avoid?
The only advice I can offer is to make sure that the price is for a replacement starter, and not just a service exchange..
Not a T1 or T2 starter, the T25 or T3 has a longer shaft..
I carry a spare starter in its bag tucked away in the off side rear of the engine compartment, along with pump,dizzy, coil and CV joint..
which one trip in two gets used to diagnose someone's VW holiday panic.......
Cordialement,
