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Re: last connections, questions about fuel system

 

If i understand your question correctly i'd advise using the larger
intake manifold fitting for your vanagon brake booster and the smaller
one for your vacuum feed(s) to the charcoal cannister. You can tee
off the line once connected to the smaller intake fitting in order to
feed both vanagon charcoal cannister lines. Or, as per the Kennedy
instructions you can splice into the vacuum line running from the
throttle body down into the subaru charcoal cannister plumbing (at
least that's pertinent for earlier subaru engines).
Here's a bit from my website to give you some pictures to reference -
for both the subaru cannister installation and for keeping your
vanagon cannister.

Go to
Visit Suby Engine-1 > Charcoal Cannister
or click here


--
Brent Weide
Portland, Oregon
www.weidefamily.net/vanagon/


Re: Error code: throttle position sensor error on re-installed engine

 

David: I won't comment on the compatibility question cuz i'm just not
smart enough in that area.
I will say that i often remove the tps (after carefully marking its
adjustment location) in order to avoid damage by the engine lift
chain. You're right, it's right in a bad position to conflict with
the strap/chain that you use to heft it.
Brent
--
Brent Weide
Portland, Oregon
www.weidefamily.net/vanagon/


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

 

I think you'll find that, here in the US, subaru replacement parts are
easy to come by. So are the parts for the Zetec engine. Once you go
abroad there may be difficulty finding subaru parts and the ford bits
are easier to come by. If you intend to keep the van in the US there
really is no downside (parts wise) of going either way.
If you intend to reside or sell the van in california, subaru 90-94
engines are the only ones that are supported by the Kennedy CARB
exemption.
You'll be very hard pressed to find folks that will remain unbiased on
this list. It's a subaru/vanagon based and it's easy to assume that
most members already have a subaru powered vanagon or have had one.
Although the list itself exists to support folks that have questions,
concerns, and problems with their installation and/or maintenance -
it's important to understand that there are a LOT of subaru powered
vans that just keep running and running with no problems.
I'm one of those wierdos that likes tinkering with engines and i find
that my engine bay (holding a 99 phase 1 ej25 with replaced quality
head gaskets) goes for very long periods without being opened. My
converted van has proven to be very reliable and happy with the subaru
conversion. The only thing i would change, if i had the funds, is the
addition of an overdrive for my automatic transmission (but that's
another conversation altogether).

To thrown in a kind word for the Zetec....that engine is the bomb.
Proven in europe, it's proven itself to be durable and long lasting.
I've always had respect for that powerplant and have no doubt that
you'd be happy with it.

--
Brent Weide
Portland, Oregon
www.weidefamily.net/vanagon/


Error code: throttle position sensor error on re-installed engine

 

84 wesite manual transmission, ej22 -- 1990 wiring harness (automatic
transmission), 1994 engine (manual transmission). So the TPS is from
the 1990. This is a Subaru-Subaru engine swap, not a VW-Subaru swap,
so the harness was fine with the last engine. So I simply moved the
intake manifold (and all the associated wiring from the engine I was
removing) to this 94 engine, then put the engine in the van. I notice
that the TPS takes a beating on the cherry picker when I pull and
install the engine as that's where the chain rubs. I have the Haynes
troubleshooting instructions for this error, I was just wondering if
there is a conflict between the harness and the engine (I wouldn't
figure, but it doesn't hurt to ask). If it turns out I damaged the TPS
with the cherry picker, can I use the TSP from the 94 wiring harness
(are the 90-94 TPSs all the same??

Thanks,
David


Re: Code 49 - 1990 AFM and IAC wiring help?

lanigan_vanagon
 

Thanks Tom for the context - and thanks Kim, that is a brilliant suggestion- I made sure they are snapped on tight...

I just took a test-run to the bike shop and it stalled 3 times in under 2 miles! Necessity is also the mother of focused diagnosis, so I turned once again to the AFM connector plug. This time, I couldn't find a ground at the black/red center wire - No ground at all! So I rigged up a quick fix and Vroom - I made it home!

I'm hoping this was the problem all along - though I will feel dumb for not ruling this out first. I had a mysterious problem a few years back that Scott Daniels helped me diagnose as the fuel injector ground. I should have remembered the lesson to ALWAYS CHECK YOUR GROUNDS!!!

In the next few days I'll take another test drive to confirm, and will post the results for posterity.

Thanks again!
Joseph
Portland, OR
1985 Vanagon ASI w/ 1990 ej22

--- In subaruvanagon@..., "Tom Shiels" <tom@...> wrote:

Good morning Joseph,
Your ECU, MAFM and IAC are the correct matched set that came from a manual tranny donor - so that can not be your problem.

Try Kim's suggestion - use some good contact cleaner - and let us know what you find.

Tom
Burlington ON


--- In subaruvanagon@..., "lanigan_vanagon" <ej.lanigan@> wrote:

Hi all,
During a recent long roadtrip in my (previously well-running) 1990 EJ22 automatic conversion, some serious hesitation, stumbling, and stalling began. It seems to happen pretty randomly, infrequently at first and may have gotten worse in the past few days.

Code 49 appeared after the first stall, and I tried cleaning the AFM with carb cleaner then some other things that were probably needed anyway (new plugs and leads, new fuel pump and filters, found and fixed some small potential vacuum and intake air leaks, etc). But I still have the symptoms, so I'm back to focusing on the AFM...

*Question 1: Can someone tell me how to test voltage the 5 ports on the AFM connector? What I think is the ground is reading .018 ohms to ground, is that too high?

Also considering the IAC. I noticed that my IAC connector has 3 ports (the middle reads 12v) but the IAC itself only has 2 outer pins (no middle!).

*Question 2: Could it be that I have the wrong IAC for my set-up? Could this lead to rich-running and gunking up the engine, causing my stumbling/ stalling?

Here's the numbers as I know them:
Engine: 1990 ej22 from a manual legacy (now in automatic Vanagon)
ECU: AA562
AFM: AA170
IAC: 2-pin (don't know the number)

Thanks for any help!
Joseph


last connections, questions about fuel system

 

I have read through the files about the charcoal canister and fuel supply, but I think my engine is a little bit different. I am not totally sure so I figured yall nice folks will help me out. So, 02 2.5L sohc rs out of a impreza. oh I dont have the suby charcoal canister so vw she be for better or worse...
Fuel. top of the rail- supply
middle- return
bottom- white line from canister

on the intake manifold.
On the right hand side looking towards the van
bigger barbed line-
on the left a tiny barbed fitting-

Can I use the big right hand side for the brake booster and the left hand side little barbed fitting to the purple line? My mechanical manual for the engine says the big one is for the brake booster on a subaru, but its advised to use it for the purple line.
I'm getting close!! so far about half of my money has been spent on bandaids(duck tap), soap and shop towels. Hopefully soon I'll be spending all the money on gas.


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

Scott Daniel - Turbovans
 

re
But others on this list say the 2.5 is another
inevitable wasserleaker
how so ?
granted I have seen some subaru engines with head gasket issues ..
though it's nothing like waterboxers.

the power curve / torque curve is what leans me toward subaur engines ..
plus I'd rather not to go to a ford dealer for a part .

where I am , all the conscious, non-violent peaceful people drive subaru's.
at the other end of the valley all the pro-military types drive big
american pick up trucks.
For me there is a demographic factor too.
plus a nice wide powerband is very nice ..just like the stock engine has
..wide power band, just lots more of it.


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

 

I've seen both set ups. One of the things I love about the Bostig Zetecs, is how much room there is in the engine compartment. That inline ford sits up right (not slanted over like VW inline 4 conversions), and that leaves a LOT of room.

One of the things I like about Subaru conversions is they just seem so right for the Vanagon. Flat fours are nice and torquey beasts, and these are real jewels of engines.

On May 20, 2012, at 3:47 PM, Stuart MacMillan wrote:

I've narrowed it down to two choices: A turnkey kit where you supply the
engine: www.bostig.com and a true turnkey Subaru 2.5 engine assembly that
is ready for installation: www.vanaru.com. Both are expensive, but these
guys have done all the conversion work so you or a shop just install it.
Time is money too, and I'd rather be in my van rather than under it. I'm
favoring the Subaru, but others on this list say the 2.5 is another
inevitable wasserleaker, which is causing me to pause. BTDT.


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

Jon Durham
 

Are you referring the Subaru 2.5L? If so, exactly what is the problem?

Jon

On 5/20/2012 2:47 PM, Stuart MacMillan wrote:

I've narrowed it down to two choices: A turnkey kit where you supply the
engine: www.bostig.com and a true turnkey Subaru 2.5 engine assembly that
is ready for installation: www.vanaru.com. Both are expensive, but these
guys have done all the conversion work so you or a shop just install it.
Time is money too, and I'd rather be in my van rather than under it. I'm
favoring the Subaru, but others on this list say the 2.5 is another
inevitable wasserleaker, which is causing me to pause. BTDT.

Stuart

'85 Westy

From: subaruvanagon@...
<mailto:subaruvanagon%40yahoogroups.com>
[mailto:subaruvanagon@...
<mailto:subaruvanagon%40yahoogroups.com>]
On Behalf Of germanyjon
Sent: Saturday, May 19, 2012 7:44 AM
To: subaruvanagon@... <mailto:subaruvanagon%40yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [subaruvanagon] Best Engine 85 Vanagon

What is the best Subaru engine for my 85 Vanagon?



--
"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the
way its animals are treated" --Gandi


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

Rob
 

At 5/20/2012 12:47 PM,Stuart MacMillan wrote:
I'm favoring the Subaru, but others on this list say the 2.5 is another
inevitable wasserleaker, which is causing me to pause. BTDT.
Water leakers? Really? Years ago maybe but nothing current.

This list is mostly about problems, go thru the archives and see how many folks are complaining about leaking heads in the last few years.
I suspect that what you will find is that there WAS a problem with 2.5 head gaskets years ago. Years ago. The new improved head gaskets fixed it, years ago.

I wonder where this old information keeps coming from? Who is saying "inevitable"?



Rob
becida@...


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

 

I've narrowed it down to two choices: A turnkey kit where you supply the
engine: www.bostig.com and a true turnkey Subaru 2.5 engine assembly that
is ready for installation: www.vanaru.com. Both are expensive, but these
guys have done all the conversion work so you or a shop just install it.
Time is money too, and I'd rather be in my van rather than under it. I'm
favoring the Subaru, but others on this list say the 2.5 is another
inevitable wasserleaker, which is causing me to pause. BTDT.



Stuart

'85 Westy



From: subaruvanagon@... [mailto:subaruvanagon@...]
On Behalf Of germanyjon
Sent: Saturday, May 19, 2012 7:44 AM
To: subaruvanagon@...
Subject: [subaruvanagon] Best Engine 85 Vanagon





What is the best Subaru engine for my 85 Vanagon?


Re: alternator-3wire lug

 

Hi Brian,
What year and model Subaru is the H-6 Alternator out of??

Tom
Burlington ON

--- In subaruvanagon@..., "b_glennie" <b_glennie@...> wrote:

I want to put an alternator from a H6 engine on my 2003 impreza engine in 86 Vanagon. Alternator plug has 3 wires: black/red, white red, and black white and old alt has 2 wires to connect to Vanagon. If any one has info on which wires to use it would be helpful. New alternator has higher amps. thanks Brian


Re: Code 49 - 1990 AFM and IAC wiring help?

 

Good morning Joseph,
Your ECU, MAFM and IAC are the correct matched set that came from a manual tranny donor - so that can not be your problem.

Try Kim's suggestion - use some good contact cleaner - and let us know what you find.

Tom
Burlington ON

--- In subaruvanagon@..., "lanigan_vanagon" <ej.lanigan@...> wrote:

Hi all,
During a recent long roadtrip in my (previously well-running) 1990 EJ22 automatic conversion, some serious hesitation, stumbling, and stalling began. It seems to happen pretty randomly, infrequently at first and may have gotten worse in the past few days.

Code 49 appeared after the first stall, and I tried cleaning the AFM with carb cleaner then some other things that were probably needed anyway (new plugs and leads, new fuel pump and filters, found and fixed some small potential vacuum and intake air leaks, etc). But I still have the symptoms, so I'm back to focusing on the AFM...

*Question 1: Can someone tell me how to test voltage the 5 ports on the AFM connector? What I think is the ground is reading .018 ohms to ground, is that too high?

Also considering the IAC. I noticed that my IAC connector has 3 ports (the middle reads 12v) but the IAC itself only has 2 outer pins (no middle!).

*Question 2: Could it be that I have the wrong IAC for my set-up? Could this lead to rich-running and gunking up the engine, causing my stumbling/ stalling?

Here's the numbers as I know them:
Engine: 1990 ej22 from a manual legacy (now in automatic Vanagon)
ECU: AA562
AFM: AA170
IAC: 2-pin (don't know the number)

Thanks for any help!
Joseph


Re: Code 49 - 1990 AFM and IAC wiring help?

 

Something simple to check is the connectors to the engine harness. I had similar symptoms on my SVX powered Westy. I couldn't figure it out and paid (a lot) to have a shop diagnose it. After replacing a lot of parts, they finally found the engine harness connectors were not properly snapped together.

On May 20, 2012, at 2:23 AM, lanigan_vanagon wrote:

Hi all,
During a recent long roadtrip in my (previously well-running) 1990 EJ22 automatic conversion, some serious hesitation, stumbling, and stalling began. It seems to happen pretty randomly, infrequently at first and may have gotten worse in the past few days.

Code 49 appeared after the first stall, and I tried cleaning the AFM with carb cleaner then some other things that were probably needed anyway (new plugs and leads, new fuel pump and filters, found and fixed some small potential vacuum and intake air leaks, etc). But I still have the symptoms, so I'm back to focusing on the AFM...

*Question 1: Can someone tell me how to test voltage the 5 ports on the AFM connector? What I think is the ground is reading .018 ohms to ground, is that too high?

Also considering the IAC. I noticed that my IAC connector has 3 ports (the middle reads 12v) but the IAC itself only has 2 outer pins (no middle!).

*Question 2: Could it be that I have the wrong IAC for my set-up? Could this lead to rich-running and gunking up the engine, causing my stumbling/ stalling?


Re: alternator-3wire lug

 

Careful here. even the though the alternator make look the same, compare it to the old one VERY carefully. The mounting holes may have a slightly different offset that will mean the belt won't fit right.

On May 19, 2012, at 11:43 PM, b_glennie wrote:

I want to put an alternator from a H6 engine on my 2003 impreza engine in 86 Vanagon. Alternator plug has 3 wires: black/red, white red, and black white and old alt has 2 wires to connect to Vanagon. If any one has info on which wires to use it would be helpful. New alternator has higher amps. thanks Brian


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

 

Possible engine choices for an 86 include the Subaru XT6 engine (6 cylinder 2.7). It means a lot of fabrication of your own. Almost any of the non can-bus 2.5 engines would be good choices. The 3.0 liter 6 cylinder I believe is a can-bus, and hence might be a bit tricker to do an install on.

Another consideration is your local laws. Most states (Federal US?) will prevent you from putting an engine into your 86 that is older than your 86 (e.g. no engines from 1983 for you). Some states will require to keep most of the "stock" emissions parts in place.

Other considerations are, are you doing the work yourself? Or having someone else do it? Someone else may only want to work on certain engine choices (due to ease of fabrication necessities, or conversion parts.) The common vendors (Smallcar, RJES) have bellhousing for certain motors, but not all. If you choose one of the less common engines, that means use of an adapter plate (probably from Kennedy Engineering.) Nothing wrong with either method.

If your van is a camper, that means it is heavier, and you'll probably enjoy it more, if you have a little more power (at the cost of fuel economy.) But maybe one of the new can-bus 2.5's is good enough for you.

Remember the stock engine is about 95 hp. Nearly any subuaru engine is going to be 50% more power.

You also need to consider your transmission. If it is still stock and has not been overhauled...you will need to have it overhauled RSN. Subaru engines which have more power, will stress it, and reveal your transmissions age.

In the end what's best for you is going to depend on a lot of different factors. Dollars, being one of them.

On May 19, 2012, at 10:10 PM, Reno wrote:

I have a syncro 4x4 vw It's a 86 I need to know the best motor for the money plus power plus fuel milage Any answers


Sent from my iPad

On May 19, 2012, at 2:25 PM, Jon Durham <Jon_Durham@...> wrote:

Thank you

Jon

On 5/19/2012 12:55 PM, UDO SILLE wrote:

For reliability the 2.2, for power and cost effective installation,
the 2.5
SOHC



--
"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the
way its animals are treated" --Gandi

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]




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Code 49 - 1990 AFM and IAC wiring help?

lanigan_vanagon
 

Hi all,
During a recent long roadtrip in my (previously well-running) 1990 EJ22 automatic conversion, some serious hesitation, stumbling, and stalling began. It seems to happen pretty randomly, infrequently at first and may have gotten worse in the past few days.

Code 49 appeared after the first stall, and I tried cleaning the AFM with carb cleaner then some other things that were probably needed anyway (new plugs and leads, new fuel pump and filters, found and fixed some small potential vacuum and intake air leaks, etc). But I still have the symptoms, so I'm back to focusing on the AFM...

*Question 1: Can someone tell me how to test voltage the 5 ports on the AFM connector? What I think is the ground is reading .018 ohms to ground, is that too high?

Also considering the IAC. I noticed that my IAC connector has 3 ports (the middle reads 12v) but the IAC itself only has 2 outer pins (no middle!).

*Question 2: Could it be that I have the wrong IAC for my set-up? Could this lead to rich-running and gunking up the engine, causing my stumbling/ stalling?

Here's the numbers as I know them:
Engine: 1990 ej22 from a manual legacy (now in automatic Vanagon)
ECU: AA562
AFM: AA170
IAC: 2-pin (don't know the number)

Thanks for any help!
Joseph


alternator-3wire lug

 

I want to put an alternator from a H6 engine on my 2003 impreza engine in 86 Vanagon. Alternator plug has 3 wires: black/red, white red, and black white and old alt has 2 wires to connect to Vanagon. If any one has info on which wires to use it would be helpful. New alternator has higher amps. thanks Brian


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

Reno
 

I have a syncro 4x4 vw It's a 86 I need to know the best motor for the money plus power plus fuel milage Any answers
On May 19, 2012, at 2:25 PM, Jon Durham <Jon_Durham@...> wrote:

Thank you

Jon

On 5/19/2012 12:55 PM, UDO SILLE wrote:

For reliability the 2.2, for power and cost effective installation,
the 2.5
SOHC



--
"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the
way its animals are treated" --Gandi

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]




TODAY(Beta) ? Powered by Yahoo!
Ten epic all-American road trips
Privacy Policy

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Re: Best Engine 85 Vanagon

Scott Daniel - Turbovans
 

99 and up Forester and I think...Legacy or Legacy Outback.

On 5/19/2012 12:26 PM, Rob wrote:

At 5/19/2012 10:55 AM,UDO SILLE wrote:
For reliability the 2.2, for power and cost effective installation,
the 2.5
SOHC
What donor would you look for, what you ask the wrecking yards for if
you wanted a 2.5 SOHC?

Rob
becida@... <mailto:becida%40comcast.net>