This last year has been distraction-filled at least with regards to my loving on my cars. We don't have a garage and we don't really even have a driveway. We have a small square patch of concrete just outside the garage door. Between that and the street are wood chips on dirt. Added to that was this recurring issue with Hapy not starting, I did not have much motivation. I did not want to lie in the mud, or work in the rain. So, I didn't. Instead, I focused on getting a garage built. Well, it's getting to nice weather again, and it would be great to have Hapy running. So, I looked back on the posts over the last year and I only lightly mentioned the recurring no-start or starting challenges in passing during the Road Report from 2024 Four Peaks. So, there's more story there. Today, I'll fill in the history and diagnosis.
Flat Beddin
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| ready for work |
I mentioned that I drove Hapy, loaded with gear, to a
Sunkicks show and after-party last June. That was actually the last show with all of the original members, but I digress. The prior year I had been having sporadic not wanting to start issues that I thought I had traced to the Injection Pump (IP) leaks. While the leaking IP was part of the problem, 12 years of ongoing Hapy-won't-start-easily issues has brought a cost. So, he didn't start the following day and he was towed home. I replaced the starter, he fired up, but I had little faith in him. So, for the 4Peaks trip (See
2024 4Peaks Road Report), we did not shut him off when we hit rest areas or whatever, and only had to start him twice the entire trip: once to leave the Winco parking lot and once to leave the 4Peaks camping lot. Both times he started with little fanfare.
Once.. Twice... Three Times a Starter
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| bad teeth |
After we returned home, however, he would not start again. I did all that work with the doors (see
The Doors) and the door cards (See
Door Cards), believing that the new starter was all I needed. Wrong. The next time I went to start him was to take a road trip, again, loaded with gear. Nope. Afterwards, I tried replacing the starter, and had the same issue. I tried with a couple of other ones over the winter, thinking that I was just getting garbage starters. I replaced the transaxle -to- starter adapter, thinking it was the starter not engaging with the ring gear on the flywheel, but peeking through the starter hole did not reveal much.... until this last time (Sat, 24-May). After removing the starter for what felt like the 50th time, I got my phone up in there and took a picture of the ring gear on the flywheel. You can see in the picture on the right here, it's badly chewed up with
many broken teeth. So, we have to lower the engine/transaxle, separate them so I can remove the flywheel and send it down to
Kennedy Engineering in Southern California to have the ring gear replaced... if it
can be replaced. Some of their older flywheels were all one unit, and this one is approaching 20 years old. A replacement flywheel with ring gear installed is a 4 week wait and $215US while getting the ring gear removed and replaced is 2 weeks and $40US (an additional $45US to have the flywheel resurfaced, if needed). I am hoping the ring gear can be separated. Otherwise, we lose all of June.
What a Drag
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| Nina's temporary home |
Last Fall, when I was unable to get Hapy running, I hooked a tow chain to the front and hauled him around the back of the farmhouse. He was left parked on a bed of wood-chips and over time he was sinking into the ground. It got to the point that this last time I went to R&R the starter, I could barely get under the rear sway bar. Boo and I decided that doing an in-place engine drop there would not be fruitful, so we again hooked up a tow chain, this time to Hapy's rear. With Boo driving the truck, I steered Hapy backwards out of the yard, through the fence and out onto the street. Our plan was to roll downhill about 50 feet and then drive the truck in nose-first, dragging Hapy into the driveway where we would push him onto the concrete slab in front of the garage. Boo suggested I try to roll-start him. She figured, if we have to tow him all the way up the hill, it's not really any different than the 50 feet we were already going to do. So, we unhooked the tow chain and let gravity (and some Boo-shoving) get him rolling. I put Hapy into 3rd (kept poppin out of 2nd), and after some rough revs he fired up. I drove him down the street, and within 10 meters the black smoke stopped and the engine settled. I turned around triumphant to a dancing-in-the-street Boo. With her help I backed him onto the concrete pad, leaving about half a meter between his rear and the garage door. It was only for a few minutes, but dang I miss driving him. So much fun.
With Hapy in place, I used the tow chain and the come-along to move Nina, the 1964 VW Beetle into the spot where Hapy was. This cleared the rear pathway back to where the shop is going too. I wrapped the weekend with Hapy's usual spring wash. Next weekend starts the engine/transaxle drop. The following week I will send the flywheel off to Kennedy. It will be 2-4 weeks before I have a replacement in hand.
That's it for now. We expect the excavation work for the shop to start this week. It will be interesting to see whether we have a shop, or if Hapy is running again first. Thanks, as always, for following along-
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