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kayakwesty Samba Member
Joined: February 15, 2007 Posts: 687 Location: East Tennessee
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Posted: Fri Oct 09, 2009 6:25 am Post subject: |
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this needs to be a sticky _________________ 1984 Westy 2.0 Jetta ABA Motor/1.8 head converted to auto tranny, with 180,000 on body, 55K on engine and transmission
B.5.5 Passat Wagen with 30v V6-67000 Miles
DAS AUTO
CHANGE YOUR FUEL LINES!
A post without pictures is useless
http://www.kayakwesty.com
http://www.waldensridgewhitewater.com/ |
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Mofus Samba Member
Joined: February 21, 2008 Posts: 369 Location: San Diego
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Posted: Fri Oct 09, 2009 7:16 am Post subject: |
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Great job! It's very gratifying going for that first drive. You have a big set of brass cajones taking it for such a long trip after only 20 miles of test drives. My first big trip will be this Christmas to Mt Whitney, about 700 miles round trip.
If any Suby swap thread should be stickied it should be ChesterKV's. It's practically a step by step how to. Ranchero was a big help too. They both helped me a lot while I was doing mine.
Happy campy-ing _________________ '87 Syncro passenger w/ 2.2L Subaru
'10 Passat Wagon (keeps Mrs. Mofus away from my van) |
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jacob. Samba Member
Joined: August 10, 2009 Posts: 802
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Posted: Fri Oct 09, 2009 7:34 am Post subject: |
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Mofus wrote: |
Great job! It's very gratifying going for that first drive. You have a big set of brass cajones taking it for such a long trip after only 20 miles of test drives. My first big trip will be this Christmas to Mt Whitney, about 700 miles round trip.
If any Suby swap thread should be stickied it should be ChesterKV's. It's practically a step by step how to. Ranchero was a big help too. They both helped me a lot while I was doing mine.
Happy campy-ing |
That thread is one of the reasons I decided that in the spring, I'm going to do the conversion myself. _________________
RCB wrote: |
jacob gets razzed a lot cause he has the only GEX engine thats lasted longer than half an oil change. |
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Brian556 Samba Member
Joined: December 15, 2008 Posts: 56 Location: Atlanta
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Posted: Fri Oct 09, 2009 8:18 am Post subject: |
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Looks awesome. Congrats! I'm about to begin my installation in the next few weeks. I'm also putting in an EJ22. What throttle setup did you go with? _________________ 1985 Westy Weekender EJ22 |
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WhiteH2O Samba Member
Joined: October 06, 2009 Posts: 129 Location: Gig Harbor, WA
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Posted: Fri Oct 09, 2009 9:18 am Post subject: |
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Great write up! Thanks!
I am planning on doing a Subie swap one day (probably when the origional engine dies). I had an EJ257 block with EJ20 heads on my last car, and I think I will probably go with a un-frankenstein-ed EJ257 for this one. It is great to have threads like this to start getting a feeling of what I will be getting myself into. _________________ 1985 Wolfsburg Weekender- 2.5L Subie Power
2002 Subaru WRX Wagon
1998 Subaru Legacy EJ257 Swap, 410 AWHP (sold) |
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Farfrumwork Samba Member
Joined: October 10, 2008 Posts: 692 Location: Mile High
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Posted: Fri Oct 09, 2009 9:46 am Post subject: |
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Thanks again all - especially Ben, great praise from a master of the conversion-arts!
Throttle - I used the setup Leon Korkin sells. good deal, and a good guy.
And yeah, if any swap thread gets stickied it should be ChesterKV and/or Ranchero. They have all the details and pain included in their threads; I just skimmed the surface and put up some pictures - there is much more involved than my post eludes to (as anyone who has done this would know).
Not that the swap is necessarily "hard", it's just time consuming. The road has been graded so many times in the past by the true pioneers it's almost paved now. It was quite fun.
Many more trips to take - She put up 200,000mi with the 1.9 and I plan on another 200,000 in the future.
-Chad |
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Mofus Samba Member
Joined: February 21, 2008 Posts: 369 Location: San Diego
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Posted: Fri Oct 09, 2009 10:21 am Post subject: |
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markmc90 wrote:
"Could you guess at how many hours you spent on it. Mostly the harness is what I'm curious about."
I think ChesterKV talks about how long he spent on the harness, but I haven't read that thread for a while.
I think Ben can do a whole conversion in about 7.5 hours Leon gets it done in about a week. A shop here in SD takes about 2-weeks.
If you preapre well for the job it can go pretty fast. If you want to clean, and repaint everything so it looks real nice it adds time.
If I just pulled out the wasser and stuck in the Suby I could have had it done in a couple weeks probably, but I have (had) no experience with this stuff. I detail how many hours I spent doing each thing in my conversion thread (http://www.thesamba.com/vw/forum/viewtopic.php?t=307465). I never added up the hours, but I was (mostly) done in 29 days. _________________ '87 Syncro passenger w/ 2.2L Subaru
'10 Passat Wagon (keeps Mrs. Mofus away from my van) |
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ftp2leta Samba Member
Joined: October 11, 2004 Posts: 3271 Location: Montreal
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Posted: Fri Oct 09, 2009 10:58 am Post subject: |
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Conversion time after 30+ done:
-Harness: now 7 hours + 1 for wrapping after tested.
-Modification to engine (conversion) + cleaning: 1 day
-Removal of engine + cleaning engine bay + installation of cooling components / Power steering line / fuel line / speed sensor: 1 day
-In order (Engine out of engine stand): Installation of adapter plate, clutch, Installation of engine in engine bay, exhaust component, harness in test mode, intake and filter = start engine : 1 day.
-Last day (fine tuning): Wrapping of harness / ECM in sealed box, engine side tins, RPM mod, electrical bypass of ALT light, installation of electronic gas pedal + cable, bleeding + testing : less than one day.
My fastest time ever: 3.5 days (i was on steroid and everything went by the book)
Longest time ever: 10 days
Average: 7 days.
This does NOT include any work on engine, my engine are basically like new so i do nothing to them. Neither any work on the radiator/ coolant line.
This is of course full time, 8-12 hours a day.
So, let say anything between 40-70 hours per conversion.
Cheers, Ben _________________ Working with rust, grease, dirt and dust is a sad truth.
------------------------------------------------------
FI part for sale: http://www.benplace.com/parts_sale1.htm
My site: http://www.benplace.com/vw2.htm
Subi conversion: http://www.benplace.com/vanaru_eng.htm
Youtube http://www.youtube.com/user/ftp2leta |
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brentw Samba Member
Joined: July 20, 2004 Posts: 18
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 10:31 am Post subject: Ceramic Paint Question and congrats on a great project |
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Chad:
The ceramic paint you applied to the intake and valve covers looks great. nice, low-key colour. who makes that?
good job on documenting your work.
all the best,
brent _________________ Brent
1991 VW Multivan Westy
powered by 1999 Subaru EJ25
Portland, Oregon
http://www.weidefamily.net/vanagon/ |
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onwardtothestars Samba Member
Joined: April 04, 2007 Posts: 225 Location: Hazenville Pass Wyoming
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 11:00 am Post subject: |
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wasserbox wrote: |
Farfrumwork wrote: |
transit to tranny land (and I'm not talking Trinidad CO) |
Heh. Heh Heh.
Gotta love Co Only jokes...
Looks good. I would have been a little (lot) overwhelmed to get an entire engine in 10 separate boxes. |
I too love jokes like that.
Great work! _________________ lots of VW's |
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Mr. Electric Wizard Samba Member
Joined: August 07, 2003 Posts: 2846 Location: Smyrna, TN
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 11:22 am Post subject: |
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Very nice!
Love to see projects like this. _________________ "Saying what we think gives us a wider conversational range than saying what we know."
~ Cullen Hightower
(T)exas (C)oalition (B)uses
(H)eidenhammer (B)ully (B)oyz
--1966 De Luxe Camper |
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isotopez Samba Member
Joined: July 11, 2007 Posts: 97 Location: Sandy Eggo, California
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Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:36 am Post subject: |
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Reviving an old thread with a question on stock ecu placement. I have an 84 an the ecu is on the driverside near the taillight and coil. I'm doing my conversion right now and am thinking about placing subi ecu under bench.
Everything I've read puts my 1.9 ecu passenger side... Do I have a special circumstance or one of a kind van or what? Lol... _________________ 1984 Westy Camper
1992 Subaru Legacy (About to donate its heart) |
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Farfrumwork Samba Member
Joined: October 10, 2008 Posts: 692 Location: Mile High
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Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 2:36 pm Post subject: |
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^^ I don't think your van is different.
If I understand your question/statement correctly, you have the stock ECU basically in the engine compartment (driver side) which is where my stock 1.9l ecu was as well (near the taillight).
I installed my EJ22 ECU under the cabinent in the rear (drivers side), which is accessible from the rear hatch. I didn't want to have the ecu under the bench seat as I stuff that area with sleeping bags and pillows (every cubic inch counts!)
Conversion is still running strong! (although my $275 motor has shown signs of oil consumption on long, HOT hwy travels - but NOT in 'normal' use, even up/down the rocky mountains). A new high compression 2.5l frankenmotor will be build/installed this winter.
OH yeah, the board won't let me edit my original (now old) post but I'd like to say that I have had GOOD interactions with Burley since this build (I now sport a high clearance hitch - which is TITS!) _________________ sold -> '85 Wolfsburg Syncro / 'Built' DOHC EJ25 (a great machine!)
'07 Legacy spec.B, road tuned stgII
'17 4x4 Sprinter, stone grey, SMB pop-top, on 33"s
"Blood stains, speed kills - Fast cars, cheap thrills - Rich girls, fine wine - I've lost my sense, I've lost control, I've lost my mind" |
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timichango Samba Member
Joined: April 07, 2012 Posts: 858 Location: Squamish, BC, Canada
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Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 5:29 pm Post subject: |
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Farfrumwork wrote: |
...I'd like to say that I have had GOOD interactions with Burley since this build [/b](I now sport a high clearance hitch - which is TITS!) |
Agree 100%—Burl fabbed, painted, and shipped the same hitch in 2 days for me, and it arrived 3x faster than any gowesty order I've ever put in. And was a hoot to talk to on the phone too.
Hitch is built like a brick sh*thouse, and really straight/dimensionally accurate. Took a bit of grease and a dead-blow to slip it into the frame rails, because it fits snug as a bug in a rug _________________ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vroomhilde-San: Our 1991 Silver Vanagon Westy automatic + Subie EJ25 |
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tarandusVDub Samba Member
Joined: August 27, 2010 Posts: 1649 Location: Between Here and There
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Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 12:52 pm Post subject: |
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Since we're waaay off topic on a waaay old thread, I'll ask....
why did you guys go with the Burley hitch and stock bumpers instead of new bumpers with an integrated hitch? the cost for a bumper was not that much more...wanting to keep it stock?
I need a hitch and have been planning to go with the RMW bumpers... _________________ 1990 Syncro 16" DoppleKabine 2.1 DJ 112i
________________________
Sold: 1972 Bay Campmobile; 1984 Westy, base model, 2WD. |
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pioneer1 Samba Member
Joined: February 11, 2008 Posts: 2069 Location: Ontario Canada
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Posted: Sun Sep 30, 2012 4:35 am Post subject: |
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isotopez wrote: |
Reviving an old thread with a question on stock ecu placement. I have an 84 an the ecu is on the driverside near the taillight and coil. I'm doing my conversion right now and am thinking about placing subi ecu under bench.
Everything I've read puts my 1.9 ecu passenger side... Do I have a special circumstance or one of a kind van or what? Lol... |
The later Vanagons have the ecu mounted to the side wall of the rear seat cabinet on driver's side. Excellent place for it,doesn't take up much room and keeps it clean,accessible . Extend the wiring,cut a hole in the rear bulkhead and mount. The original Subaru rubber firewall gasket is reused to keep the wiring clear of the metal edge. _________________ "Always waiting for tomorrow ruined everything"
'85 Porsche 911 Targa
'76 Westfalia project |
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tarandusVDub Samba Member
Joined: August 27, 2010 Posts: 1649 Location: Between Here and There
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Posted: Sun Sep 30, 2012 7:12 am Post subject: |
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That is exactly how SmallCar did mine, and it is a very clean setup. It's out of the way but easy to access, and doesn't take up much space in the little cubby next to the heater box. _________________ 1990 Syncro 16" DoppleKabine 2.1 DJ 112i
________________________
Sold: 1972 Bay Campmobile; 1984 Westy, base model, 2WD. |
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Farfrumwork Samba Member
Joined: October 10, 2008 Posts: 692 Location: Mile High
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Posted: Mon Oct 01, 2012 8:57 am Post subject: |
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tarandusVDub wrote: |
why did you guys go with the Burley hitch and stock bumpers instead of new bumpers with an integrated hitch? the cost for a bumper was not that much more...wanting to keep it stock?
I need a hitch and have been planning to go with the RMW bumpers... |
Not that I love the original bumpers or anything, but... I don't need anything more than the stock bumpers really. Aftermarket bumpers add weight, and honestly I am not in love with any of the current offerings (the canasync (sp?) units come the closest - but the receiver is non-normal). The Burley hitch adds a mere 10lbs over the bolt on hitch setup (between the tow hooks) that I had, but is ROCK SOLID.
I couldn't buy just a rear bumper either (I hate mismatched bumpers) so the price goes up considerably with a F/R setup.
Not sure that the RMW or GW bumpers would be as solid as the Burley hitch either when hanging 3-4 bikes off of it (but I could be wrong on that).
I'm still thinking designing of my own minimal AL bumpers (someday, maybe...) but I can integrate to the Burley hitch when/if I do that.
At this point, if I'm going to add any weight in the protection arena it would be sliders (Das Mule). I think not having sliders when you need them would be worse than not having beefier bumpers when you need them. I can buy a replacement stock bumper and some new end caps...
my .02 _________________ sold -> '85 Wolfsburg Syncro / 'Built' DOHC EJ25 (a great machine!)
'07 Legacy spec.B, road tuned stgII
'17 4x4 Sprinter, stone grey, SMB pop-top, on 33"s
"Blood stains, speed kills - Fast cars, cheap thrills - Rich girls, fine wine - I've lost my sense, I've lost control, I've lost my mind" |
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tarandusVDub Samba Member
Joined: August 27, 2010 Posts: 1649 Location: Between Here and There
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Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2012 12:23 pm Post subject: |
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Those reasons all make sense, and I agree with you on not being totally crazy about the aftermarket bumpers, but the main reason I have been considering them is the added protection from the steel construction; the original bumpers do absolutely nothing...so I'm trying to figure out if the additional weight is worth it for the additional protection...thoughts on that?
One thought I've had, since I hate mismatched bumpers too, is to reduce cost and weight by buying a RMW rear with hitch, and then do the black treatment on my front so that they at least match in color... _________________ 1990 Syncro 16" DoppleKabine 2.1 DJ 112i
________________________
Sold: 1972 Bay Campmobile; 1984 Westy, base model, 2WD. |
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babywindow Samba Member
Joined: July 02, 2013 Posts: 37 Location: SF Bay
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Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2018 7:23 pm Post subject: Re: My EJ22 swap - Projects appear smaller in mirror |
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Another thread ruined by photobucket |
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