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banter general discussions etc
by MrWolf on Fri Nov 13, 2009 8:47 am
Had some new "funny" problem this morning... As the temperature was reading -8C my accelerator cable had frozen up  I washed the car on Monday, indoors warm and nice, used a lot of car shampoo, water, tender love and care. I noticed now that the accelerator cable stocking has a split right at the firewall and this might be where the water enters. Anyway, it took me over 15 minutes in the cold, fiddling with pulling the cable back after i first floored it from inside and it didn't want to go back again... Warming gently wit hot air blower and lightly swearing, my missus kind off resigned and irritable waiting. We were in a hurry for work so I had to go driving with it fixed on 1500 rpm until it finally loosened up after another 10 minutes or so. It was so cold that even the quick warm up system had seized and was not doing it's thing. The engine sounded soft from the start without the heavy rattling from the strain of breathing through the partly closed paddles. Nice mechanism - when you really need it - it doesn't even work... And for the passenger doors in the back, they were both frozen as well. First wouldn't open, then wouldn't shut... I remember my father used some graphite stuff on window mechanisms and the locking mechanisms in the doors to prep for winter. Anyone know of the stuff or other suitable compound to help it not seize up with ice?
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MrWolf
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by meooo on Fri Nov 13, 2009 9:19 am
VW do an spray oil (similar to WD40) that we had to use on old Galaxy door locks, brilliant stuff but MEGA bucks for a very small tin. However, if you want to get into the car in winter.......
What have I told you about Thinking Erroll??
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by jammywagonwheel on Fri Nov 13, 2009 10:02 am
look up "Shooters Choice All Weather Synthetic high Tech Grease. Ebay is a great source.
I use it on my shotguns during the winter (and the garage door lock, Side gate bolts etc), and they have never had an issue, its designed for guns BUT to stop your locks gumming up its worth a punt. One of my fellow shooters uses 5W40 engine oil which sprays off.
The Blurb on the packet says:
PREVENTS METAL DAMAGE IN THE FOLLOWING GUN AREAS: Actions Frame rails Shotgun hinges and hardware Bolt-action locking lugs
TEMPERATURE OPERATING RANGE: -65° F to +350° F
HIGH-TECH GREASE ADVANTAGES: Quick and easy to apply Odorless (for the hunter) Clings to metal surfaces Doesn't gum-up Doesn't wash off with water Doesn't melt when hot Doesn't stiffen when cold
RECOMMENDED USES: Firearms, Fishing Tackle, Marine, Sports Equipment, Compound bows, Auto, Industrial, Shop, Household
Worth a go.. its about £5 a tube (syringe type applicator)
John
You cant polish a t*rd.. But you can roll it in glitter
if its broken - fix it if it isnt - mod it!
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by MrWolf on Fri Nov 13, 2009 10:24 am
Spray grease. Good idea, I'll try that on the doors and quick warm up paddle. Have some lithium spray grease lying around.
I also changed the glow plugs a few weeks ago, but it still is a hassle to start. Cranks nice, fires, but then gets no rev even with accelerator depressed and it dies again (2,8 4jb1t). Beginning to think my battery might be a bit weak and that the glow plugs arn't doing their job. The voltmeter only barely stays over the red area when I'm glowing. Is that normal?
It should be a few amps going through the plugs if they are about one ohm each (think I have read this somewhere on the forum). In parallel that will be 1/4 ohm. And on 12ish volts that will be around 50A rushing from the battery. Then it is no wonder the battery shows a little low voltage while glowing...
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