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Date:         Fri, 20 Sep 2013 12:29:16 -0500
Reply-To:     Jim Felder <jim.felder@GMAIL.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Jim Felder <jim.felder@GMAIL.COM>
Subject:      Re: Front-end workout
Comments: To: JRodgers <jrodgers113@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To:  <523C7E2E.7090307@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252

Few would have as thorough a rebuild done as I just got through with just because of the expense, and I have no idea what what would be. I know it wouldn't be 25 hours, really, but you know how shops are. They charge what the book says to charge. I am guessing I spent 25 hours on it, maybe more, and that doesn't include running around town to find a 10 x 1 tap and die when I crossthreaded a brake fitting at the end of an exhausting day, or trying to get someone to press the bushings for me, or a number of other time-consuming tasks that were not part of the job itself. I have been buying parts for this for six months. The parts took up nearly half of a set of garage shelves. The wheel bearings did not need replacement, but I wasn't going to do any of this again later if I could help it. Someone taking a job like this to s shop would want to limit the work to a reasonable amount of money, and I didn't care about that as I was doing the work myself. I guess I spent about $700 on parts, but I bought some high-end poly bushings and OEM stuff is just fine, I think, except as I mentioned last night the OEM donuts on the radius rods are shabby compared to what T3 Techniques sells.

Another reason for doing all this at once is, as a couple of posters have mentioned, my age. I am 63 and do not want to do this again as long as I live. Er, let me restate that. I do not want to do this again EVER. It was not all that horrible and I have a high tolerance for being abused by cars, but I have been sore for a solid week.

As for a lever as someone mentioned, the only one I needed was to press down on the anti-roll bar so I could compress the upper fitting down in its recess in order the get the lower one and the fastener on. But it was a big one.... I took the hitch bar off the back and used it!

Most people I think would have the most problem with the simplest part of all, the anti-roll bar. If you are not careful about details and you do not have a very large C clamp (mine was just enough at 16 inches) you cannot compress the rubber bushings where the hold-downs mount to the body in order to get the bolts in them. The steering rack bushings took a long time, too. When I say careful about details, consider that I did one thing right: do only one of the drop links at a time so you will know you have them facing the right way when you reassemble things. If you don't, you can look forward to doing it all over again, and I would say pressing in those bushings and the getting the drop links over the flared ends of the spring bar was a challenge. I won't waste everyone's time with the details, but I came up with a good solution as I doubt there is a press in existence that could take the whole length of the bar. Just write me and I will tell you what you need.

And I would advise anyone with a rusty undercarriage to either trade cars first or save up and get it done by a shop. There is no way I could have dealt with that. But, on my lifelong Alabama vanagon, The things I feared most--getting the long bolts out of the inner control arm bushings—turned out to be trivial. They tapped right out.

I bled the brakes on my lunch hour and put the wheels back on. I just drove it around a little (I have to wait for an alignment to drive it much). The only thing I can compare it to is the day I drove my 1990 Carat off the lot as a new car. It's fantastic.

Jim

On Fri, Sep 20, 2013 at 11:56 AM, JRodgers <jrodgers113@gmail.com> wrote:

> Wonder what a rebuild like this would cost if done in a commercial shop? > Any ideas - ball park?\\ > > John > > > On 9/19/2013 6:54 PM, Jim Felder wrote: > >> Just finished up a nearly week-long marathon of front end work. Replaced >> the brakes, a caliper and line, bearings, and all bushings right down to >> the steering rack with polyurethane and on the inner ones, Flennor OEM >> style rubber. Also complete all-around spring replacement with two GoWesty >> front springs. New metal sleeves on the anti-roll bar drop links (NLA, >> almost didn't find any, mine came from Canada) and the whole enchilada. >> >> There is nothing on a vanagon I have not had out in my hands now except >> for >> the five-speed transmission. This front end work is the most extensive, >> painful and and exhausting things I think you can do by yourself (I did >> call upon the wife twice to put force on a along prybar) on a Vanagon. It >> makes a new engine R and R look downright trivial, cost is not all that >> much different either. Even painting the car did not take so long. >> >> Whew. Tomorrow I will bleed the brakes and see if it was worth the effort. >> I could not have put it off anyway, I was beginning to hear metal on metal >> at 3479000. >> >> I tried some poly bushings on an MGA restoration some years back and >> didn't >> care for them all that much. But the stuff that is sold by T3 Techniques >> for the Vanagon was irresistable. If you replace nothing else with poly, >> shuck those rubber radius arm bushings and go with the T3 Techniques >> setup. >> Genius. >> >> http://t3technique.com/ >> >> They have about everything you ever dreamed of for suspension, etc. Bus >> Depot had the best buys on brakes, shoes, etc. GoWesty had the springs I >> sprang for. >> >> BTW I pulled all of this over last weekend and took the parts around >> several local shops to have the old rubber bushings pressed out and new >> ones in. Got quotes like $250. Went to harbor freight and bought their >> cheapest 4wd joint press for $75.00 and did it all with that in about an >> hour and a half. A total of eight bushings. >> >> Jim >> >>


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