Two steps forward, two steps back.
Great weather this weekend, so I had it all ready, other than my steel gears.
I was wondering how many launches I could make with the worn aluminum gear, and it was exactly 0.
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I had other gears, so I put them on. Unfortunately, I think due to it stripping like that it put a lot of lateral pressure on the output shaft, and it was compromised. I started it up and while warming up, the gear fell off, as the shaft broke.
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I'm not too sure about these output shafts, though I think I'm the first person to actually break one. Guys with heavier cars have been ok, so I think it was just the gear stripping and putting pressure on it in an unnatural way. I've ordered a couple more, but they could take a couple weeks to arrive. I think I'll take one to a machine shop and see if I can't get one made from hardened steel. I've also asked Cison to make a steel version as well.
My steel gear did arrive in the evening, but that thing weighs a metric ton. I decided to look at some other options. There were a lot of much lighter ones, but they all have 8mm shaft holes, rather than 6mm. I decided to go ahead and order them, and I can sleeve them like I did with ones on the transmission. (Essentially a sleeve with a hole drilled for the set screw to go through to the D-shaft).
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I got 40t and 45t versions. I'll use these with the 16t steel gear on the clutch shaft.
So, with that all broken, I spent the afternoon with the engine. Interesting now without all the gear noise, I could hear that the valves/lifters and everything sounded very quiet and smooth. I played around with the tuning and burned about 4 tanks of gas over an hour of playing around.
The new exhaust worked great. No oil spitting from the joints. I did see some oil near the rear of the engine, but that might have been when the gears where stripped and jammed and probably caused the seal to leak some. I cleaned it up and ran, and only saw very small amounts after that, both front and rear - these seals probably aren't the best in the world, but they'll do. I got the engine tuned about as well as possible, I think. It was idling down around 1800-2000, and I found the sweet spot fuel mixture that got it to hit 10k rpm. It spooled up very quickly and was responsive.
One issue I've been having is the radio, ever since I switched from the "classic" 4 channel to the "advanced" 8 channel receiver. The issue was if I got the radio too close to the car, it would totally glitch out and I'd have to shut it off and "reboot" the car. Some days it wasn't as bad (and I think it gets worse as the receiver battery gets lower), but it's mostly a huge PITA. My reason for using the 8 channel was to be able to use the nitrous. I decided to pull it out, and go back to the 4 channel for now. Honestly, I think I was biting off more than I could chew anyway, at least at this point. First things first, make a single pass! I tested some more with the 4 channel, and all was ok again.
After that, I pulled the engine out and cleaned it up. I had a bunch of new serpentine belts and wanted to swap mine out as it had gotten chewed up some when stuff was misaligned. I also wanted to clean up the distributor and hall sensor, because back when I had coolant and oil leaks, that thing got pretty covered in crud. I had noticed once in a while that there was some misfiring going on too, and suspected that to be the culprit, as I wasn't seeing the indicator lights on the sensor. I pulled the distributor (and being very careful to make sure the engine was in the right position internally to retain the timing) and noticed that the hall sensor connector was crumbling apart. I have a pack of 5 spares, so I swapped it out, and put on the new belt too.
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The engine was pretty clean this time, thanks to the better sealed exhaust. Now I just wait on my output shafts. I couldn't find anything generic that looked like it would work.