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LAGrunthaner Samba Member
Joined: March 18, 2007 Posts: 5509 Location: 1st Coast
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Posted: Fri Sep 17, 2021 3:18 am Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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BarryL, are FTE and ATE parts always all German?
BarryL wrote: |
So you guys open and inspect the FTE ones? I trusted them and no whiff of leaks anywhere. But I've always trusted FTE and ATE.
The front slaves were pairs on the left and right but different Chinese makes.
One side fronts were fairly good quality and could have been left in...maybe. The other side front pair actually had chips of sharp metal from taps as well as porous casting so bad that any honing was a joke. I did open them and cleaned them and greased them with brake lube hoping the rubber would somehow seal when pressurized. |
_________________ American Red Cross Safe And Well:
https://www.redcross.org/about-us/news-and-events/...bsite.html
Maui Roadsters
www.mauiroadsters.com
http://www.oacdp.org
Lind wrote: |
Have you considered simply starting with a nicer bus? I don't know what your skills are, but the race is easier if you can see the finish line. If you are not a runner, don't start off doing a marathon. |
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BarryL Samba Member
Joined: November 01, 2004 Posts: 14269 Location: Casa de Oro, California
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Posted: Fri Sep 17, 2021 6:08 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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LAGrunthaner wrote: |
BarryL, are FTE and ATE parts always all German?
BarryL wrote: |
So you guys open and inspect the FTE ones? I trusted them and no whiff of leaks anywhere. But I've always trusted FTE and ATE.
The front slaves were pairs on the left and right but different Chinese makes.
One side fronts were fairly good quality and could have been left in...maybe. The other side front pair actually had chips of sharp metal from taps as well as porous casting so bad that any honing was a joke. I did open them and cleaned them and greased them with brake lube hoping the rubber would somehow seal when pressurized. |
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Linda,
Maybe others can help answer you better but as far as I have experience the two companies are German. The home company is ultimately responsible for the product even if it was assembled outside Germany. I've gotten FTE slaves that were marked Italy and Austria on the box. I think I even got Spain once. Almost always they say Germany. The quality is tip top notch in all regards. |
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ToolBox Samba Member
Joined: January 27, 2004 Posts: 3439 Location: Detroit, where they don't jack parts off my ride in the parking lot of the 7-11
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Posted: Fri Sep 17, 2021 6:41 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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LAGrunthaner wrote: |
BarryL, are FTE and ATE parts always all German? |
Not always. They might manufacture the part in one of their facilities or have it built to spec by a sub contractor. They also have facilities all over the world and don't get me started on counterfit parts. |
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Lind Samba Member
Joined: November 06, 2000 Posts: 9915 Location: idaho
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Posted: Fri Sep 24, 2021 7:28 am Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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ToolBox wrote: |
LAGrunthaner wrote: |
BarryL, are FTE and ATE parts always all German? |
Not always. They might manufacture the part in one of their facilities or have it built to spec by a sub contractor. They also have facilities all over the world and don't get me started on counterfit parts. |
"made in Germany" means nothing. For a part to be "made in Germany", all they have to do is put it in a box in Germany that says "made in Germany". If any part of the process happens in Germany, then they can say "made in Germany", even if what happened in Germany was not part of the manufacturing process. That is all totally legal by their laws.
Years ago, I got a bunch of NOS singleport heads that were in VW-Audi boxes with stickers that said "made in Germany". The heads had Hecho en Mexico cast into them, and there was white paint over top of that casting which was flaking off. So Volkswagen tried to hide their origin by painting over the casting with paint which would end up in the oil if not cleaned off. These were '90s stock, and I seriously doubt that anything has improved since then. _________________ .
Wanted:
Idaho VW license plate frames or other dealership items.
VWoA literature and early dealership or distributor literature/pictures/information
. |
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BarryL Samba Member
Joined: November 01, 2004 Posts: 14269 Location: Casa de Oro, California
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Posted: Tue Sep 28, 2021 6:07 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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DadaCheese wrote: |
Don't know why I didn't do this years ago!
Typically you have to take off the special lug-nut that keeps the spare on the bracket ('67 Westfalia Walk-through has the spare in the back left), then heave it out of the well so that you can turn it around and find the Valve Stem to check the pressure or add air.
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How is this holding up? Does it leak down? What is the long threaded thing on the end? Is that for mounting it? |
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AS350driver Samba Member
Joined: April 17, 2016 Posts: 1340 Location: Tucson
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Posted: Tue Sep 28, 2021 8:22 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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Installed new Wolfsburg West tie rods, both, and new OG type shocks from
WW as well. Wow! Not even a difficult job. Rides much quieter and plusher in the front. Steering lighter and smoother Should have done it years ago.
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LAGrunthaner Samba Member
Joined: March 18, 2007 Posts: 5509 Location: 1st Coast
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Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2021 3:27 am Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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Interesting. I can't fit my spare in at all. I'll try this.
BarryL wrote: |
DadaCheese wrote: |
Don't know why I didn't do this years ago!
Typically you have to take off the special lug-nut that keeps the spare on the bracket ('67 Westfalia Walk-through has the spare in the back left), then heave it out of the well so that you can turn it around and find the Valve Stem to check the pressure or add air.
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How is this holding up? Does it leak down? What is the long threaded thing on the end? Is that for mounting it? |
_________________ American Red Cross Safe And Well:
https://www.redcross.org/about-us/news-and-events/...bsite.html
Maui Roadsters
www.mauiroadsters.com
http://www.oacdp.org
Lind wrote: |
Have you considered simply starting with a nicer bus? I don't know what your skills are, but the race is easier if you can see the finish line. If you are not a runner, don't start off doing a marathon. |
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BarryL Samba Member
Joined: November 01, 2004 Posts: 14269 Location: Casa de Oro, California
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Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2021 6:06 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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After finishing my brakes and fresh front drums with front bearings the bus
had a wiggle in the steering / front suspension that was really pronounced
at 60 mph. Fearing the worst such as a bent drum I jacked up each side
alternately to check for axial and radial trueness. Nothing appeared out of
the ordinary but the left side tire/rim would settle on its own to the same
place down every time. I thought could it be the rim isn’t on the drum true
or is the drum bent off center?
I was taught when you hear hooves look for horses not zebras so I tried the
simplest thing first; I removed the wheel weights and took it for a test
drive: taa-daa, hardly any wiggle. I realized the problem must be in the
balance of the wheel on that left side. I raised wheel off the ground and
noticed it still rotated on its own down. Primitive as it is I kept trying
different places and weights just setting the weights on the tire tread at
the top until the wheel wouldn’t settle any more. I marked that spot and
pounded on the weights, one inside, one outside. Took the bus for another
test run and lo-and-behold it was absolutely perfect.
What is weird is the weights were almost 180 degrees from originally. |
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mandraks Samba Member
Joined: November 28, 2004 Posts: 7050 Location: Lawrenceville, Ga
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Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2021 8:57 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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that IS weird. It does show, though, that getting your wheels and tires balanced is a good thing _________________ regards
Uli
----------------------------------------
'53 3-Fold Oval, L35 Metallic Blue, looking for a narrow hatch panel |
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cdennisg Samba Member
Joined: November 02, 2004 Posts: 20278 Location: Sandpoint, ID
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Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2021 9:19 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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It would seem to me that a tire shop guy messed up the balance. 180 out is a pretty straight forward mistake. _________________ nothing |
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BarryL Samba Member
Joined: November 01, 2004 Posts: 14269 Location: Casa de Oro, California
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Posted: Fri Oct 01, 2021 6:08 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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The only thing different is different drums. The old weight location had been there for mega miles with zero problem.
Maybe I should rotate the rim on the drum a couple lugs just to prove out the drum being heavy on one side. |
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cdennisg Samba Member
Joined: November 02, 2004 Posts: 20278 Location: Sandpoint, ID
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Posted: Fri Oct 01, 2021 7:02 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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BarryL wrote: |
The only thing different is different drums. The old weight location had been there for mega miles with zero problem.
Maybe I should rotate the rim on the drum a couple lugs just to prove out the drum being heavy on one side. |
I wonder if you can have the drums balanced? A competent machine shop could probably do it, just like balancing a flywheel. _________________ nothing |
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Tom Mohr Samba Member
Joined: September 01, 2003 Posts: 179
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Posted: Mon Oct 04, 2021 12:24 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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Drove this press bumper, with small nuts (bus not driver) on leg of the road trip, from OKC to Gallup NM, the last 40 miles with some help.
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mikelars Samba Member
Joined: February 27, 2019 Posts: 238 Location: North Carolina
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Posted: Fri Oct 08, 2021 11:59 am Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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Man - tough learning curve for me on my bus engine. First I fixed a vacuum leak on the 1/2 side under the dual carb intake manifold that was causing all kinds of strange behavior and not allowing for carb adjustment. Used Remflex thick gasket material and it sealed up nicely. But changing an intake manifold gasket while the engine was in the bus was a total pain.
Then it ran ok for a week. But then, just when I had everything all adjusted i thought, i kept getting a rough idle and misfiring - so I looked at the valves - they were ok. I tinkered with the carb balancing about 3-4 times - finally determining that the idle mixture screw did nothing on cylinder 1. Then i noticed cylinder 1 didn't fire at all on idle (I did this by removing the #1 spark plug wire form the distributor while idling and it didn't change a thing!), but #1 would kick in once revving higher. So i googled it and found "clogged idle jet".
So it was super easy to take out the #1 idle jet and sure enough there was a tiny black sausage shaped thing poking out of the idle jet hole. God knows where that came from, but after cleaning it out, the #1 fired properly on idle.
It only took me 2 days and feeling totally frustrated - but there it was... _________________ Here is my 1961 Beetle Restoration:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLW_2wBCs4Ny2qXEPvdnfvEzN42T8JA8zO
Here is my 1966 Split Bus - Restoration Channel:
https://youtube.com/channel/UCPBRysmvrJlif2wzwEwiuwQ
2332 Torque Motor Build
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLW_2wBCs4Ny2HwsKM9QT4LFpcSqP3QG0p
Engine Rebuild 1968cc Playlist:
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLW_2wBCs4Ny1JbZ2EgJQQ2awfo0koZRqz |
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mikelars Samba Member
Joined: February 27, 2019 Posts: 238 Location: North Carolina
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lowindO Samba Member
Joined: May 05, 2005 Posts: 323 Location: pensa~cola
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Posted: Sun Oct 10, 2021 6:26 am Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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mikelars wrote: |
Ok - preparing for a new fuel line setup:
6an with a fancy filter
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That’s sweet! What filter is that? Where do you get all that? _________________ Why don't you have a narrowed beam yet?
My Squareback's Video |
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mikelars Samba Member
Joined: February 27, 2019 Posts: 238 Location: North Carolina
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Riff Raff Shivering Sambian
Joined: October 25, 2004 Posts: 3097 Location: Alberta
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Posted: Tue Oct 12, 2021 6:43 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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This is the far left end of the bell curve labelled "Exciting Things Done to Your Bus Today", but I haven't needed to do anything for the bus all season. It has performed flawlessly and has been really enjoyable to drive.
I've had this middle seat ashtray kicking around forever, so yesterday, installation made it to the top of the list of things to do.
Mediocre excuse for a backing board on the middle seat, but first rate ashtray!
I don't smoke (anything) so could not commission it.
I'll just have to trust it will function adequately if ever called upon.
_________________ The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance, but the illusion of knowledge
- Daniel Boorstin |
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pyrOman Fire Master
Joined: July 21, 2003 Posts: 12409 Location: Over 2002 posts deleted!
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Posted: Wed Oct 13, 2021 11:01 am Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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The cross country trip totally killed the front coil overs and the rear KYBs. During the trip I got a set of stock shocks but that lowered the front to the point of the tires rubbing when bottoming out! So I finally got a full set and replaced them today.
_________________ Some people are so busy being clever they don't have time enough to be wise. |
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guatebus Samba Member
Joined: May 12, 2003 Posts: 393 Location: Oakland, CA
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Posted: Sat Oct 23, 2021 3:33 pm Post subject: Re: What did you do for your Bus today? |
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Got started on the transaxle swap yesterday. Proud that over the years I've made some smart choices (antiseize in the right places, straight clutch arm, shcs for upper left engine mount bolt), and obtained the right tools so all of this disassembly went off without a hitch. Next step: cleaning! Then reassembly.
But first: some rest! I'm a lot older than the last time I pulled the transmission and I hurt today.
_________________ '64 standard microbus
'69 deluxe microbus |
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