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Eagle

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Everything posted by Eagle

  1. Eagle

    XJ Roof Racks

    I have an aftermarket rack. I'd like to retrofit a factory rack. Where can I buy seam sealer?
  2. Eagle

    XJ Roof Racks

    This summer I hope to get my original '88 XJ back on the road. When I bought it, in the Pioneer trim level the roof rack was extra. I didn't think I'd ever have a need for it, so I didn't buy it. Now I wish I had done so. I have a choice of four XJ parts vehicles, all of which have roof racks, that I can take a rack from. What's holding me back is water. Specifically, how to keep water out of the interior after I drill a bunch of holes in the roof. I believe the longitudinal rails screw into nutserts that are drilled into the roof, is that correct? What did the factory use to waterproof all those attachment points? Thanks.
  3. Nothing personal, but your cousin is an idiot. I've already told the story of my grad school roommate (the consummate car nut, BTW), who credits their XJ with saving the lives of his wife and two kids when they were hit head-one by a larger vehicle. I didn't mention the '87 XJ I have parked out behind my garage. I bought it from the secretary of a company I once worked for after she was t-boned in the driver's side A-pillar when a car ran a red light. It was towed back to her house, where her then-boyfriend bolted a junkyard driver's door on it, and she continued to drive it. The A-piller is definitely bent and I didn't buy it to fix, I bought it for parts -- but the unibody held up much better than a body-on-frame vehicle of the same size and vintage would have survived. * No airbag * No side airbags * No reinforced beams in any of the doors Did I mentioned that her only injury was a couple of bruises?
  4. I don't think anyone has said that.
  5. My graduate school roommate's wife had a '92 or '93 XJ. She was hit head-on by a drunk driver, with two young children in the Jeep. She and the kids were uninjured. My roommate is a car nut. He credits the design of that "unsafe" XJ with having saved his wife's life. And you won't get speared by the steering wheel. The steering column has a shear pin in it -- it'll collapse in an accident.
  6. Actually, '95, I believe. And only for the driver, correct. The passenger-side airbag didn't arrive until the 1997 make-over.
  7. Eagle

    240z

    Good news. The 240Z is old enough that things wee basically "standard" -- no fuel injection, crankshaft position sensors, MAP sensors, idle air controllers or any of that to worry about. My roommate in school had one. He crashed it within a few months of buying it (new -- that's how old I am), and had it completely rebuilt with an SCCA competition-oriented suspension. My brother drove it after the rebuild and reported that it understeered terribly. I drove it five minutes later and in my opinion it oversteered terribly.
  8. Let's see if I can post the 4.0L torque curve for comparison ...
  9. That doesn't hold true for the 2.5L. The 4-speed manuals had 3.54 gears, the 5-speeds had 4.10s. The stock 2.5L doesn't have any low-end torque. Unlike the 4.0L, which in most years reached the torque peak by around 2200 RPM, the 2.5L peaks at 3200 RPM -- and it's very much a "peak," not a flat curve like the 4.0L torque curve. The 2.5 engine is a reliable engine, but in stock form it's pretty anemic. (And that torque chart is from 1997, with the newest Chrysler multi-port injection. The '86 thru '90 2.5 with the throttle body injection was even worse.) With the little tires the 2.5L typically came with, the 4-speed would be turning 3000 RPM at 65 MPH. Gear it up to 4.10s and that becomes 3482 RPM. 75 MPH becomes 4000 RPM. That's churning the engine pretty fast, and for what? You're way beyond the torque peak at that point. Look at the 5-speed, with overdrive but 4.10 gears, and it's not too different. 2600 RPM at 65 MPH in 5th gear, 3000 RPM at 75 MPH. That's on the torque peak. What gears would you swap in? 4.56 isn't much of a change, so you'd probably have to go to 4.88s. Now you'd be looking at 3100 RPM at 65 MPH and about 3600 RPM at 75 MPH. I've owned three 2.5L MJs and two 2.5L XJ. More gear can't create a miracle. That's why I think an RV cam could be a game changer. It won't turn a 4-cylinder into the equal of a 4.0L, but I think it could make a significant improvement.
  10. I don't know nearly as much as I should about camshaft design and selection. That Melling cam has longer duration but less lift than any of the Jeep factory cams. What does that translate into as far as the performance characteristics are concerned? I found this: https://www.hemmings.com/stories/article/the-right-camshaft-choice Based on that article, it appears all three of the Jeep factory cams are more performance-oriented than torque and fuel economy oriented. The Melling cam looks like more of an RV type cam, which should be good for fuel economy and street driving applications.
  11. I still have the printed books from 2000 and 2002. There were three performance cams for the 2.5L -- Phase I, Phase II, and Phase III Phase I -- P4529656 Duration: 240/240 Overlap: 24 Centerline: 108 Lift: .430/.430 Phase II -- P4529657 Duration: 248/248 Overlap: 32 Centerline: 108 Lift: .440/.440 Phase III -- P4529658 Duration: 256/256 Overlap: 40 Centerline: 108 Lift: .450/.450 The Phase I cam is supposed to be good for 900 - 5400 RPM. The Phase II cam is supposed to be good for 1100 - 5500 RPM The Phase III cam is supposed to be good for 1300 - 5600 RPM For what it's worth, the factory performance cams for the 4.0L have exactly the same specs as the cams for the 2.5L.
  12. If the old Mopar Performance catalog is still available, the factory used to offer two cam kits for the 2.5L Jeep engine. I'm sure the cams aren't available, but the old books (from when the Performance Catalog was a printed catalog rather than a web site) had the cam specs.
  13. Eagle

    Rust

    Second photo shows a truck that burned. That article is mostly idle conjecture, with little basis in reality. The Comanche is no worse (or better) than most other compact pickups of similar vintage. My brother owned a '93 Nissan that started to crack in half just behind the cab -- exactly like the MJ in that first photo. Bro caught it, and took it to a welding shop that specializes in repairing vehicle frames. Note: This shop SPECIALIZES in repairing such frames. That means there are enough vehicles on the road (I'm in Southern Connecticut -- we get salt on the roads in winter) with failing frames to sustain a business with a moderately large shop and several employees. They aren't all Jeep Comanches. If you want to see disappearing frames, look under any Wrangler from the salt belt.
  14. Years ago there was a guy in NAXJA from one of the Rocky Mountain states who had a cam in his 2.5L. Not that exact cam -- he had one of the factory cam kits. He loved it. He said it greatly improved performance and -- paradoxically -- also improved his gas mileage.
  15. First? Radiator and heater core.
  16. Fast forward to 18:15
  17. This is brilliant!
  18. What's a scuttle panel?
  19. Eagle

    Vehicles owned.

    Too many to list or to remember. Somewhere on the order of 35 4-wheel vehicles. Does not include motorcycles.
  20. I had a cap from an S-10 Chevy that worked quite well, although it didn't look quite right. Cap height wasn't exactly the same as the cab roof.
  21. A kill switch in the fuel pump circuit doesn't need a relay. It obviously won't hurt to install one, but just based on the gauge of the wire, any decent toggle switch should be able to handle the current directly.
  22. Eagle

    More KeyParts Love

    FANTASTIC!!!!!!!
  23. Dirty Comanche is correct. The one toward the rear is the windshield washer reservoir. In the future, it might be better to use the terms "driver's side" and "passenger side." You described these reservoirs as being on the right side, but they are on the left (driver's side) of the vehicle. The battery is on the right side.
  24. I've never seen a 2.5L XJ or MJ with TWO Coolant tanks. Please post a photo. I don't think your system is factory.
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