Pumpkn210 Posted April 8, 2008 Report Share Posted April 8, 2008 There is a complete CA16DE in a pulsar at the Tacoma Pull-A-Part. Looks to be in good shape. Link to comment
ggzilla Posted April 8, 2008 Report Share Posted April 8, 2008 CA engines have a poor reputation. Except for the DET version. Link to comment
DISLEXICDIME Posted April 8, 2008 Report Share Posted April 8, 2008 i like how the 16 revs my girls sentra had one that engine bounced off the rev limiter real fast. to bad they don't make them in rear wheel drive i would putt one in my dime! Link to comment
Pumpkn210 Posted April 8, 2008 Author Report Share Posted April 8, 2008 I want to put a CA18DE in the Pumpkn so I was lookin for one and came across the CA16DE. You can get RWD trannys for them too. All I gotta figure out is what I gotta buy to run a carb. Link to comment
Bleach Posted April 8, 2008 Report Share Posted April 8, 2008 carbs would suck! :D Leave the stock fuel injection on there. Its a good engine. I would run a CA16DE in a 620. good gas milage and more power than an L20b for sure. Link to comment
DISLEXICDIME Posted April 8, 2008 Report Share Posted April 8, 2008 i would leave the fuel injection Link to comment
Pumpkn210 Posted April 8, 2008 Author Report Share Posted April 8, 2008 I have heard some of the arguments for FI. But I have had lots of good experience with carbs and want it to be old school and simple. I just think that if I did FI it would cluster up my engine bay. Not to mention the extra expence of purchasing the Brain and Harness. Link to comment
Bleach Posted April 8, 2008 Report Share Posted April 8, 2008 Imma go put that CA16DE in my 350Z... Link to comment
ggzilla Posted April 9, 2008 Report Share Posted April 9, 2008 want it to be old school and simple yes, carbs is old school no, carbs are not simple. Try getting one tuned right :-) EFI is dead simple, and runs perfect. Use the factory harness and brain, there is no need to buy an aftermarket computer. It will even help you find the problem if something goes out of spec. Carburetors don't do that, well except by not running right. But they don't tell you which part is bad... Link to comment
Mark_Z28 Posted April 9, 2008 Report Share Posted April 9, 2008 yes, carbs is old schoolno, carbs are not simple. Try getting one tuned right :-) EFI is dead simple, and runs perfect. Use the factory harness and brain, there is no need to buy an aftermarket computer. It will even help you find the problem if something goes out of spec. Carburetors don't do that, well except by not running right. But they don't tell you which part is bad... Carbs are much easier to tune and diagnose without computers. Its either idle mixture or a vaccum leak that will cause poor idle, bad fuel pump if no fuel in carb(or plugged filter if crappy tank), and if aftermarket not much for moving parts. With EFI you have multiple sensors, computer, wiring that you have to go through to find a problem. Even with self diagnosis of mosat EFI it doesnt tell you the exact part thats bad. Now aftermarket EFI is good but expensive also. Dual carbs can be a pain to set up and tune no doubt, but once they are set they are good, never had to mess with mine after set up. Dual carbs will also give more top end power since the stock EFI was not made for power but for gas mileage and emmission control. The individual throttle body injection systems are the best of both worlds but cost 2 or 3 times as much as a dual carb set up. Link to comment
Pumpkn210 Posted April 9, 2008 Author Report Share Posted April 9, 2008 Carbs are much easier to tune and diagnose without computers. Its either idle mixture or a vaccum leak that will cause poor idle, bad fuel pump if no fuel in carb(or plugged filter if crappy tank), and if aftermarket not much for moving parts. With EFI you have multiple sensors, computer, wiring that you have to go through to find a problem. Even with self diagnosis of mosat EFI it doesnt tell you the exact part thats bad. Now aftermarket EFI is good but expensive also. Dual carbs can be a pain to set up and tune no doubt, but once they are set they are good, never had to mess with mine after set up. Dual carbs will also give more top end power since the stock EFI was not made for power but for gas mileage and emmission control. The individual throttle body injection systems are the best of both worlds but cost 2 or 3 times as much as a dual carb set up. WORD! Link to comment
datzenmike Posted April 9, 2008 Report Share Posted April 9, 2008 Whatever you're comfortable with. If you know carbs that's what you go with. I would go with EFI, not that I know much about them, but there are advantages to using them. I should imagine that any CA18 or CA20 efi would work on a CA16. Link to comment
Mark_Z28 Posted April 9, 2008 Report Share Posted April 9, 2008 Got a little off topic. If you cant find any carb intakes you may have to stick with a fuel injection system. Best to get a stand alone aftermarket version though. Link to comment
b210in Posted April 9, 2008 Report Share Posted April 9, 2008 if you go carb how will you fire the cylinders? you would have to get a megasquirt to just run the ignition. or somehow adapt a dizzy. just for your info, over at the 240sx forum, theres a thread in the ca18det section that says that you can essentially run a ca16de or ca18de from a front wheel drive to a rear wheel drive. the motor mount positions on the fwd motor are slightly different from the rwd motor, but the tranny and clutches are all the same bolt pattern. he is using a ca20e 5sp tranny from an 80's era 200sx. if you were to drop it in your car, you would have to fab up some kind of motor mounts anyway. i have been reasearching a lot to confirm this info. with no luck. Link to comment
datzenmike Posted April 9, 2008 Report Share Posted April 9, 2008 The CA20 used in the '83 200sx was carb. The next year it, and a CA18ET were available but with EFI. CA18ETs were available till '88 and the CA20 for one more year. Would a CA16DE head fit a CA20????? Link to comment
ggzilla Posted April 10, 2008 Report Share Posted April 10, 2008 For the ignition, you can use MegaJolt, only $79 kit and it runs a coil pack setup. Carbs are much easier to tune and diagnose without computers. I'm sure you are right. I haven't used any aftermarket EFI computers, and I constantly hear of people having trouble with those. So my comments are not about those, but only about factory setups. I've tuned dozens of carb cars and many EFI cars of all makes... practically all EFI cars have a computer so you don't need to "buy" another one just to tune or test it. You don't even need special equipment for pre-1994 models. And they tell me which part is bad. Sometimes the problem is not one of the electronic ones, it's bad compression, loose vacuum hose, etc these are the difficult "EFI" problems to solve ... just like on a carbureted vehicle. So you need to know the same skills, yea. Give it a try, you might like it. Go with a factory EFI system, no worries, no problems. Link to comment
b210in Posted April 10, 2008 Report Share Posted April 10, 2008 For the ignition, you can use MegaJolt, only $79 kit and it runs a coil pack setup. I'm sure you are right. I haven't used any aftermarket EFI computers, and I constantly hear of people having trouble with those. So my comments are not about those, but only about factory setups. I've tuned dozens of carb cars and many EFI cars of all makes... practically all EFI cars have a computer so you don't need to "buy" another one just to tune or test it. You don't even need special equipment for pre-1994 models. And they tell me which part is bad. Sometimes the problem is not one of the electronic ones, it's bad compression, loose vacuum hose, etc these are the difficult "EFI" problems to solve ... just like on a carbureted vehicle. So you need to know the same skills, yea. Give it a try, you might like it. Go with a factory EFI system, no worries, no problems. i didn't know megajolt existed, this is going to change my future swap now. good info, thanks zilla Link to comment
Mark_Z28 Posted April 10, 2008 Report Share Posted April 10, 2008 Megasquirt is a good aftermarket injection system, you can control about everything from the control box that comes with it. Uses a few sensors so not real bad to run. Link to comment
Bleach Posted April 10, 2008 Report Share Posted April 10, 2008 just buy a running Pulsar. They are the sweetest cars ever made! Link to comment
ggzilla Posted April 11, 2008 Report Share Posted April 11, 2008 I really wanted a Pulsar when the first appeared here (1983?). The reviews were glowing. The engine is sweet. Only problem it is fwd, which is not bad, but doesn't match my Ferrari and Jaguar. Link to comment
Bleach Posted April 11, 2008 Report Share Posted April 11, 2008 FWD is good in the ice and snow Link to comment
datsunfish Posted April 12, 2008 Report Share Posted April 12, 2008 For the sake of $ and convenience why not just run a naps or L in there.Do a carbed z22 or l20b and that little guy will fly.About 1.5 times the displacement. Link to comment
ggzilla Posted April 12, 2008 Report Share Posted April 12, 2008 I've heard that L20B is a bolt-in for B310. Just use the A10 crossmembers, driveshaft, etc. Link to comment
Guest DatsuNoob Posted April 12, 2008 Report Share Posted April 12, 2008 FWD is good in the ice and snow Nothing quite like FWD drifting in the snow with e-brake assist. I especially like the roundabout at Kenaskat-Palmer state park. My RWD deficient corolla is atleast good for that :rolleyes: :) Link to comment
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