Date: Mon, 23 Dec 2013 14:31:20 -0800
Reply-To: Jim Arnott <jrasite@EONI.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Jim Arnott <jrasite@EONI.COM>
Subject: Re: Engine woes - what to do?
In-Reply-To: <528spqakk1ic8rh57llkepoa.1387833561583@email.android.com>
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Here's what I did.
Reseal the motor.
Drive it.
Start collecting inline parts.
When you have a substantial percentage of the parts to make the conversion,
get started. (It will take WAY longer than you expect. A year in my case.)
Remember to take the vitals of the waterboxer before you pull it. Video is
a good selling point. Having that available easily doubled the amount I
sold the motor for.
I collected parts for about 4 years before I pulled the trigger. I had:
Engine mounts, bell housing, cooling hoses, a low mileage motor and a couple
wiring harnesses and most importantly, the help of a couple friends that
were way more familiar than I as to how this was going to happen.
Look at ABA lower end with a counterflow head. Digifant EMS. It is the
simplest solution that fits under the engine cover. I have an
Adventurewagen, so encroachment into the passenger compartment was no big
deal. Hence, I decided to stay with cross flow head and the Motronic EMS
that came with the ABA motor. Counterflow & digifant would have shortened
the development time about 9 months as it was the wiring that was the
largest stumbling block (and it will fit under the lid.) Mating the '97 OBD
2 EMS to an '84 Vanagon was a challenge.
Cost? By the time I sold the removed waterboxer stuff, my cost was under
$500. A lot of dollars changed hands, but the net cost was under $500.
Spares? I have a less than 90k motor sitting on a pallet waiting for when I
wear this one out. $200. Changing it will be a plug n play operation. I
figure about 6 hours between drive in and drive out. And if I choose, I can
freshen it at my convenience.
Worth it? 17 mpg up to 21 mpg. I can run down the Columbia River Gorge at
70 mph if I so desire. I can climb the 7% grade between Pendleton and La
Grande, OR at 65 mph in third if I'm in a hurry. Fully loaded.
I smile every time I step on the loud pedal. 9 months later. I still smile.
Worth every penny. Worth every minute it took. And it's all still
Volkswagen.
Jim
-----Original Message-----
From: Jeff Stewart
Sent: Monday, December 23, 2013 1:19 PM
To: vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM
Subject: Re: [VANAGON] Engine woes - what to do?
Todd, I'm facing the exact same situation. My 85 weekender with about a
hundred sixty five thousand miles is leaking coolant from the right head . I
too am agonizing over rebuild, engine swap, and if so which one? They all
seem to have their pros and cons, I've been leaning towards an inline VW 4
cylinder, but everything I read says 93 or earlier engine, which means they
are going to have high mileage, and is it really worth the effort?
Todd Last <rubatoguy@COMCAST.NET> wrote:
<snip>
>I was wondering if I could get opinions on the best course of action in
>this situation, not wanting to spend tens of thousands of dollars. Would
>list memebers give me their 2 cents worth and if possible, what the
>aproximate costs for the various solutions range from? I'm not sure if it
>makes more sence to just install new heads and hope for the best, or go
>full bore and swap the engine.