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Date:         Fri, 14 Sep 2007 18:42:21 -0700
Reply-To:     Brian Jarvinen <brianvwagain@YAHOO.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Brian Jarvinen <brianvwagain@YAHOO.COM>
Subject:      where did the starter bushing go?
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

Well it has been another long couple weeks sorting out electrical gremlins. [I'll have another post shortly about alternator fun.]

I am in the process of replacing a starter and naturally this requires changing the starter bushing. (Thank you VANAGON archives!) Per the many posts over the years I went to do it with a 12mm tap (some posts mentioned a 7/16 tap but I figured the metric would be more accurate) but ran into a surprise in the process. A bit of background - 84 Westy, stock 1.9L, manual trans; after removing the starter (but without taking off the axle, I really don't wanna do that if I don't have to), by finger-tip feel alone it felt like perhaps the bushing was already splitting in two as I could feel a pronounced gap in part of it's circumference. I hoped I could exploit that with a pair of needle nose pliers perhaps but of course the bushing is in there far tighter than that. So I turn the tap in and it gets a nice bite going and is moving down in there until resistance ends. Per what I have read I kept turning several more turns assuming the bushing was in the process of being backed out up the tap. And of course most of this is done on feel without being able to see much, especially with the axle still attached. So after what seemed like enough additional turns to get the bushing moving out I figured by now I could pull it the rest of the way, so I pull the tap out.

And there was no bushing! There was plenty of metal debris all over the tap, but I didn't hear any metal sounds of the rest of it falling anywhere. So my question is: Where did it go?

Could it have been so thin that the tap extraction process made it disintegrate?

What is the front of that space in the housing like, could a lot of fragments fit in there?

Let's say some of them got into the flywheel space - would this be a terrible thing, or would they end up at the bottom of the trans case never to be worried about again?

After this happened I finally went out and got a new battery for my flexi-flashlight and took as much of a peek in there as I could. As far as I can tell there is no remains of the bushing to be seen, but you can't see the entire cavity, and most of it not all that great. I also tried to get what I could out of there with a small vacuum cleaner with an empty receptacle and then examined what I got ... some pieces of definitely brass-looking metal, but no more than 5-10% of the volume of the infernal thing. By feel with my pinkie it seems completely gone.

Now I can't quite decide what to do and since this is Friday night and I don't expect a lot of response until Monday, I think I'll muddle forward and put in the new bushing and the new starter. This is a daily driver and I'm falling pretty far behind in life right now and need to get back on the road.

Installing the new one is nagging at me now too, I found this in an old post:

>I rigged up a tool to get the new bushing in by jamming two nuts >onto a long bolt, with enough exposed length to match the depth >of the new bushing. I used some rubber tape to expand the end >of this improvised tool so it held the bushing snugly. Oiled it >up, and tapped it into place **very gently** with a light hammer. >The brass bushing breaks easily, so no pounding!

(I guess I experienced that 'breaks easily' part.) I don't totally follow this...the new bushing will be on the end of the bolt, somewhat firmly on top of the tape, so when you tap on the end of the bolt the whole thing will slide in but then the bolt and tape will slide back out once it is all the way in? This seems like the best idea I've read, better than using a bolt minus tape as this would seem to score up the bushing pretty good?

Some more info on installation I found was this:

>The bolt needs to be very close in diameter to the hole in the >bushing. Run the nut up the bolt for the length of the bushing and >then place a dab of grease on it and then the bushing. The >grease holds the bushing on. Then guide into hole and tap in.

Grease holding it on seems counter-intuitive to me. Once it is in the hole the friction of the walls of the trans case will be stronger than the grease and the tool will come back out, right?

And finally to make this all more than you ever wanna know about one of the more frustrating parts anywhere in these things, this great advice bears repeating:

>Make sure that you lubricate the new bushing before you drive it in. > >*stand the new bushing on your thumb. Fill it to the brim with >motor oil. Cap it with your index finger and squeeze. This will >allow the oil to penetrate the walls of the bushing and permanently >lubricate it. You will notice that the oil will "sweat" out >through the walls. It is very satisfying. > >*it is best to drive the new bushing in with a dedicated tool that >will not mar the lip or surfaces of the bushing. A marred bushing >will drag the starter down. Find or make a suitable installation tool.

One last question: now that the bushing is well lubed via oil saturation, should I still put a bit of lithium grease on the end of the starter shaft before installing it? This would seem the best way to extract it as I keep imagining a well lubed bushing coming back out of the hole?

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