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bryankazmer

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Posts posted by bryankazmer

  1. Hopefully this is not viewed as highjacking, but I'm noticing another area of "could have ordered" but was very uncommon - premium level full size cars of the sixties-early seventies in bright red with aftermarket wheels.  Cadillacs, Electras, big Chryslers and Mercs.  These cars were not typically decked out like fire engines but I am seeing it commonly now.  And they had resonators, not Flowmasters.

     

    Sounding like a cranky old fart, perhaps

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  2. This is not voodoo science.  Methylene chloride is a carcinogen.  I remember using it as a polymerization solvent 40 years ago with people well trained in chemistry and not afraid of handling chemicals and we were darned careful about avoiding exposure by using proper equipment.  

     

    Would I use it as a stripper?  Yes, but only with the right equipment - good ventilation and a chemical vapor mask (NOT a dust mask) with cartridges appropriate to a polar solvent.

  3. I agree about the CVT maintaining efficient operation, and this is a good discussion on the technology.  But the OP is asking about application in a transportation appliance type vehicle - check the vehicles being compared.  ( Crosstrek is too sporty - not a word I would ever use to describe a Crosstrek).  I don't think the transmission selection is critical here. Consider what else about the candidate vehicles you like/dislike .

  4. the RPM is supposed to just gradually change, that's how it works.  The concept is like a Reeves drive, reducing engine rpm variation.  Some versions (Nissan?) have fake shift point feel programmed in, which I found really odd.  CVT makes some sense with a naturally aspirated engine where the rpm can be kept nearer tom high efficiency, but I don't think they make sense with a turbo where you basically want two operating regions.

     

    I think DSG is better technology, and much as it pains me to say it perhaps better than conventional manual, but it is offered on only a few cars.

  5. The short answer is not really, without causing a different type of defect, like a shiny spot.  Whether it is technically a scratch or a mar (has to do with the shape of the damage) you've displaced some of the polypropylene in the plastic matrix.  It's like the scuff you get on a lower door panel.  There are some industrial products sold for hiding flow lines in molded plastic parts that might mask this.  Do a search for injection molding supplies, I think a company called Stoner is one supplier.

  6. Packard used this system for a while (48 -50).  On those you latch the side you want to be the hinge by pulling the lever up, and unlatch the side you want to open by pushing the lever down.  Is the Buick system the opposite as you describe?  

     

    Packard also used the starter under the accelerator like Buick

  7. You don't necessarily need to talk to the owner, but contacting Haartz in Acton, Massachusetts and asking for tech support is a good idea.  The company is still very active in supplying the automotive industry.  If you know it, have ready which specific Haartz product was used.

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