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bazz54

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Everything posted by bazz54

  1. I guess that has a "de-sulfator" on it? I bought a de-sulfator (as a separate item) many years ago, pretty much out of curiosity. It was a kit supplied by a small firm in Scotland. I very quickly decided that it really did work, and helped recover some old batteries. Batteries die through various causes and the de-sulfators only work on those suffering largely from sulfation, so they don't work on all batteries. I've only used the CTEK on good batteries so far, so have no feel for whether or not it is effective on sulfation. I've put my kit one on an oscilloscope to look at it's output waveform; must try that on the CTEK.
  2. With low-mileage cars, rust on the discs can be an issue, and so too the problem of sticking calipers. I occasionally do a trip on a road with very little traffic and quite a steep and long hill. On the way down, if no one is behind, I take the chance to "exercise the brakes" in the hope that it will have some restorative effects . Always good when the car slows well and show no pulling to either side.
  3. I am retired now, and have two cars, so neither car gets a great deal of use in mid-winter. This is not good for the batteries, and in particular, the Gen7 (security system?) seems to drain the battery. Also, the "other car" has a set of winter tyres, so is used in preference if the weather is bad. My old battery charger needed "manual" disconnection when the batteries were fully charged, and there have been times when I've appreciably overcharged batteries, which are mightily expensive these days. Last autumn I bought myself one of the all-singing, bells and whistle CTEK chargers, and this has been the first winter I've had it. It's been a very good experience, knowing I could just connect it up and pretty much forget about it. I really didn't like the price, but I'm glad I bought it . I know people who have bought cheap smart-chargers on-line and have quickly come to regret it. I have no connection with CTEK and other prestige makes are available.
  4. I have no faith in the colour coding system any more. I suspect that garages might use some (claimed) "Universal" formula. As above, only use the Toyota stuff in my Gen7.
  5. Interesting, certainly looks like it works but hard to know how well the sealant will work.
  6. All problems solved... I think. The outcome is a surprise, but makes everything understandable, which is good. The issue lies with the precise shape of the sensor; it has a shoulder on the section that goes in to the hub and I had not noticed that the shoulder has a slight taper and so it sits in the hub a bit like a cork in a bottle. The "shim" was 21 years of rust and muck. I've tried to do a reasonable drawing as attached. Put it back with no shim (it's a long story getting to that point) and all is good and the ABS rumbling at low speed appears to be gone. Changed the oil and filter while I had it on stands. Many thanks for you contributions - always good to be able to bounce ideas off people when you're struggling gen7 abs sensor.pdf
  7. Thanks for the comments. No Playdoh, but got some Bluetack.
  8. What was it that Sherlock Holmes said about ruling the possible things out? I hadn't thought of it but you'd have to think it's possible that something odd with the casting happened. I've just found out that the part number on the sensor is the right Toyota part. One thing's for sure; that sensor and that hub cannot be used together without some "restorative" addition. I never intended to take the sensor out at this stage, but noticed that the 10mm hex head mounting screws were very rusty and thought I'd try change them before they got worse. The sensor just came out with the screw. The road to hell... good intentions .
  9. Inserting the sensor as far as it will go in to the hub (presumably the point at which the sensor is touching the ring) then there is a gap of ~1.5mm between the underside of the sensor shoulder and the hub. So to give a clearance to the ring of say 0.5mm, the 'shim' would need to be 2mm thick.
  10. This is the very first time I've ever got involved with ABS sensors. There's the YouTube video above where a guy was clearly installing new shims with a new sensor. But, I found a video of a guy replacing a sensor on a Corolla and there were no shims. Conversations I've had elsewhere confirm some cars/bikes have them and the manual would specify the thickness. The shim sets the clearance between the sensor pole and the reluctor ring. I think you can see at least part of the shim on the second picture above; it had completely changed to rust, some of it just fell off, some of it was well stuck on. In terms of the Gen7, could it be that some production batches had them and some not? It's not that unusual for there to be some variations over the production run of a car's lifetime. My 7 is a pre-face from 2002. Ideally, I could contact Toyota and they would tell me, but I suspect that support for the Celica is pretty minimal and this is very obscure. I am only the second owner of the car, which was only 3 years old when I got it. Given that there was a shim on mine, I think I have to re-assembly it with something equivalent; I've made one out of aluminium just to keep me on the road (have yet to install and test it).
  11. In the Gen7 sub-forum, I've been talking about some quirkiness with my ABS. I have now have the sensor out. It seems that they are installed with a metal shim beneath them to set the clearance and this has rusted to pieces - see pics. The first pic is the sensor after wiping away the muck with my finger and the second as it was when removed, with the pole covered in rust . However, there was clearly a shim under the sensor which has completely rusted away. This Youtube shows a man fitting shims under a sensor https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5UDpWyIvWC4 Do we know anything about what Mr Toyota does on Celicas? No mention at all of this in the Toyota workshop manual. I'm told the manual should give a shim thickness, typically 0.6 to 0.9mm. My car is 21 this year, so it's potentially a problem arriving with any Gen7 sometime soon.
  12. £700 sounds very fair. Can you tell us what the part is that Toyota are no longer supplying? I have no idea what's not available and what (if anything) is still available from them.
  13. There are quite a few threads on the forum where people have replaced their G7 subframes. Given that the subframe is ~£240 (they were still available direct from Toyota not too long ago), then for sure, various other parts are needed but I would not thought they would total £700 in parts, but the old threads might give some guidance. I guess it may be a case of asking whether while the subframe is off, it may be worthwhile replacing various braking or suspension parts etc, which may be currently OK, but best done at the same time?
  14. So, all that gas has just gone in to the atmosphere! It really is time that selling such DIY air-con stuff was made illegal. If you don't do a pressure test before re-filling, you are just guessing that you don't have other leaks and the same thing could well happen again.
  15. I've stayed away from anything using SMD's; would need a younger pair of eyes to cope with those. As for tantalum, I've always regarded those as components that need very carefully designed circuits to be reliable. I have an old scope made by a Japanese company called Leader (not sure if they are still around) and that used to blow tants (which were the original fitments) and I got fed up with them, put in good quality aluminium electrolytics and never looked back. The practice of putting small ceramics alongside electrolytics is common practice in ham a radio equipment where there may be some level of RF around. The picture above shows traditional through-hole components in the Gen 5 ECU; have you ever taken a look to see what a Gen7 ECU looks like inside?
  16. Could some tell me, to make a list of caps for a particular ECU, are there any Toyota sources (service sheets?) available or is it a case of taking an ECU, taking the lid off and spotting the (electrolytic) caps? I've not heard of this problem arising with Gen7's yet (?), but I'd be willing to get involved in compiling a Gen7 list. A quick look on Google suggests that there's a lot of info already there about cap replacement in ECU's in general.
  17. I mess around with vintage radios/electronics and the sort of electrolytic capacitors shown in the picture above do often degrade, even in household electronics. It shows up most in low value components (10uF and less). High temperatures will certainly accelerate the problem. As for ceramics, I didn't know you could get ceramics with values of 10uF; I think the largest value of ceramic I've ever seen would be 0.1uF. The quality of electrolytics has improved enormously over the last 20-30years, but the difference in quality between no-name components and the big-name components can be huge. There's a parameter called "effective series resistance" (ESR) and good quality modern caps have appreciably better ESR than old components and cheap components. Build quality and life expectancy is also much better in quality brands. Obviously, the quality brands are appreciable more expensive to buy.
  18. I think the risk with getting one made is that you don't know what you will get until you've got it it, and then you may not like it, though I guess that would be true of non-OEM mild steel too. That's why your SS was interesting, but obviously Alunox may be a hard to do trip.
  19. This looks to be what I would loosely group as an "underseal" type of product. That is to say, it is something along the lines of an oil or bitumen type goo that can can be put on top of paintwork and may offer some additional corrosion protection. I've used such things in the past but not for a very long time (except for the insides of cavities). I tend to believe that if you have a really good paint system in place, they don't do much for you. They are all permeable to oxygen and water. In fact, I think they tend to conceal areas where rust is trying to make a come back, as it always will. So Waxoyl, Dinitrol and stuff like this generally don't interest me.
  20. You have to ask what is the chemical basis of the product? Rusting is an electrochemical reaction which is now very well understood scientifically. Similarly, the electrochemical routes to stopping (or at least impeding rust) are well understood. The big paint companies (e.g. PPG) have research labs in different countries with lots of scientists working on this; when it comes to bridges, oil rigs, ships, rust is HUGE business. So, where do these Lanoguard products fit in to the scheme of things? "All that glitters, is not gold".
  21. I think it's hard to say what to do to the inside of an old tank. I have heard of some people putting citric acid solution which will nicely remove the rust and leave a clean(ish) metal surface, which you could then coat with... who knows? How many products have a long track record with E10? If the inside looks half-decent, I think I would be inclined down the route of "If it ain't broke..."
  22. Seems to me that the problem with old fuel tanks it that it's difficult to know just how good or bad they are (internally) when you get them. I bought a USB endoscope inspection camera off ebay for peanuts which is very good, but I've never used it in tank - might be handy. Quite what the future olds in the new ethanol fuel era remains to be seen, but it may well prove hard on fuel tanks. I've never bought any products from Frost; suspect that they may be over-rated and over-priced. I was underneath my Gen7 last week and spotted 4 spot welds on the tank which I guess hold the fuel filter (or something) inside, and the spots showed the earliest signs of corrosion, so they got zapped with zinc phosphate.
  23. That sort of info can be found in the Autodata CD's. Expensive to buy... but can you get a 30 day free trial???
  24. I think we've gone from "just in time delivery" to "just too late". Lots of people stopped working it the height of Covid, and are now reluctant to return. Then there are all the pinged people in self lock down. I've had grocery deliveries for 12 years from Ocado... but not this week, or next week, or maybe even the next week
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