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timvw7476 Samba Member
Joined: June 03, 2013 Posts: 2206 Location: seattle
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Posted: Sun Jun 06, 2021 10:03 pm Post subject: Re: Buying a Bay Window |
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not a huge deal. You will be pulling the left rocker assembly. The nuts are right there, 11mm or so. Take off the rocker shaft for that cylinder. The snapped valve adjuster screw remnant will thread right out the backside of the threaded boss.
There is one 'spring' you need to set right when you reassemble, the pushrod tube retainer spring that keeps the tubes in place. Make sure that spring is pressing IN on the bottom lip of the tubes. Not UP at you pushrods. |
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crownline Samba Member
Joined: September 10, 2010 Posts: 593 Location: Northwoods of WI
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Posted: Mon Jun 07, 2021 6:26 am Post subject: Re: Buying a Bay Window |
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Is it just me because I don't see the push rod tube retaining spring in that picture. _________________ 1972 Bus 1700 cc Single Carb. But not a progressive.
Barelymuvin
Wish I still had the ones I got rid of.
"It"s got some dings and dents and neither of us is going to SEMA."(Update, I went to SEMA in 2019 but the Bus stayed home)
[url=http://www.vw-mplate.com/mplate-8446.png]Click to view image[/URL] |
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busdaddy Samba Member
Joined: February 12, 2004 Posts: 51153 Location: Surrey B.C. Canada, but thinking of Ukraine
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Posted: Mon Jun 07, 2021 7:38 am Post subject: Re: Buying a Bay Window |
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If it's there it's well hidden.
Use caution when replacing the rocker assembly, those nuts strip super easy, 9' lbs torque IIRC. _________________ Rust NEVER sleeps and stock never goes out of style.
Please don't PM technical questions, ask your problem in public so everyone can play along. If you think it's too stupid post it here
Stop dead photo links! Post your photos to The Samba Gallery!
Слава Україні! |
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airschooled Air-Schooled
Joined: April 04, 2012 Posts: 12728 Location: on a bike ride somewhere
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Posted: Wed Jul 28, 2021 6:58 pm Post subject: Re: Buying a Bay Window |
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Ryan! How is your idle holding up after our little twist Monday night?
When we talked about cold start idle speed, this is the screw I wanted to point at but didn't want to get my white shirt dirty.
On a stone cold engine, remove the air filter. Observe choke plates. Tap the throttle one time and make sure the choke plates close slightly on a warm day. Snugly on a cold day. Observe the gap at the screw tip (shown) once the choke is adjusted correctly. Close the gap and go approximately one turn in. Start the engine, and be ready to turn the screw up or down to get an idle that fires on all four cylinders, no higher. It may take a day or two to get it perfect if your choke is out, or if your carb is more sensitive than others.
See you on the road,
Robbie
_________________ Learn how your vintage VW works. And why it doesn't!
One-on-one tech help for your Volkswagen:
www.airschooled.com |
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