Postby Red » Thu Mar 07, 2013 4:08 pm
A 1985 GT-S and they couldn't figure out real fast it was RWD.<G>
"Well, Bubba, that there thing is the drive shaft, and there's just the only one of it"...Good lord, I'd better lay off the water and coffee and stick to the Scotch.
The '85 was a relatively low compression engine and from what I keep hearing, we got that because the higher-compression options couldn't meet EPA standards. if you can pin down more info on the new engine, maybe someone here has had experience with whether it CAN be approved at all. Or, is there any record that your car, with that engine, ever passed inspection before? I'm not suggesting it can't, just that it would be nice to know it CAN before digging into everything. Then there's a whole magical world of folks who claim they can add all sorts of things to your gasoline to get a cleaner burn. If you explore that, use it up and get it out of the car as soon as you can, just in case the plumbing doesn't like it.
Maybe retarding the timing, giving the mixture more time to burn, would help. Retarding to the point where it hurts.
And I'd check the ignition wires, if you're getting a weak spark some folks say that will make an incomplete burn. (I'm not so sure I believe that, since once the mixture ignites, it ignites, period.) New ignition wires have about a 5000 ohm resistance, 20,000 ohms are still ok, 50,000 means they should have been replaced ages ago. Gen-you-whine Toyota wires will have a year printed on them and can go 5+ years without any performance loss.
AWD GT-S, ROFL! Yes, the prototype Subaru GT-86, finally located in Arizona!<G> Which, by the way, may not be totally absurd. I'm told that Toyota was embarassed at having an inferior all wheel drive system and the deal with Subaru is going to give them access to Subaru's AWD system.
I was just tickled pink when my car turned 25 and the inspection rules changed to "Four wheels, two lights, one horn? Have a nice day!"
-- Original owner, 1985 GT-S