Date: Tue, 2 Jan 2007 21:19:57 -0500
Reply-To: Mike Collum <collum@VERIZON.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Mike Collum <collum@VERIZON.NET>
Subject: Re: throttle flat spot
In-Reply-To: <00ff01c72edb$8356d550$0c02a8c0@eric91xuut3737>
Content-type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
In that you'd have to remove the 2 Phillips screws to change the board
(and wires as well) it would be much easier just to elongate the holes
in the board and move it over a bit. That'll work every bit as well as
a new board.
I don't know of any source for a replacement board. There are companies
that rebuild AFMs but I've never looked inside one to see if that board
was replaced.
Several years ago, on my '84, I experienced occasional stumbling at
highway speed and I opened up the AFM only to determine that the track
worn by the wiper hadn't gone completely through, so, I cleaned it
really well and put it back together. I haven't had the problem since.
BTW, when you put the top back on the AFM, I recommend that you seal it
only from the outside. If you smear all the mating surfaces with RTF or
some such, you might never get that top back off in one piece.
Mike
Airic wrote:
> Thanks
>
> So the wiper just wears out after 200,000+ miles? So it sounds like the AFM
> is the culpit, I can't think of anything else that would flake out like
> that.
>
> Mine does not have a capacitor on it. Can I just replace it with a new
> board? Does anyone sell just the board, or is the capacitor needed even with
> a new board, or is there a way to build the harness fix you speak of?
>
> If it werent for my fear of getting rearended while trying to find the right
> gear(shifter fix kit on order from Vanagain.com), and now this I would be
> having a better time with the Van.
>
> Thanks
>
> Eric
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Mike Collum" <collum@VERIZON.NET>
> To: <vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM>
> Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2007 7:44 PM
> Subject: Re: throttle flat spot
>
>
>
>>What is often called "Vanagon Syndrome" (AFM wiper surface wear) applies
>>to 1.9 and 2.1 engines. VW initially identified the problem as
>>affecting 2.1 engines and came out with a "Harness fix". They later
>>revised that to include the 1.9s as well. BTW that harness fix works on
>>both engine sizes also.
>>
>>One fix is to remove the Phillips head screws (a bear) and to move the
>>board a tiny bit (may have to elongate the holes the screws pass
>>through). that way the wiper has a fresh surface to ride on.
>
>
>
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