Draker Posted August 24, 2012 Report Share Posted August 24, 2012 I vote locking this thread until he's located a FSM. 3 Link to comment
HRH Posted August 24, 2012 Report Share Posted August 24, 2012 Hahahah!!! Lulz! +1 :D Link to comment
VintageRice Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 Best advice right here jalen. Buy a running car and fix it when it breaks. Dont buy a broken car and try to fix someone elses pile of problems. I highly doubt you'll have only one thing to fix and it'll magicly be running and driving. Once one thing is fixed on that car your going to find that 5 other things need attention, then 5 more, then 5 more....... till its driving reliably. Then before you know it you've gone through and replace a parts of every system on the car......................trust me. Link to comment
HRH Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 Reminds me of when I sold my '96 hardbody, and my 81 Accord, and bought a 63 F100 (cheap too!). I liked that truck a lot, and trying to restore it put me right in the poor house until I sold it. Old Ford parts aren't cheap. It did run well, I'll give it that. But brakes, and lights, and a bad ring gear for the starter. Linkage that kept binding up that would necessitate me pulling over and whacking it with a crescent wrench to unbind it. Oh the fun times! :) Unless you're prepared to spend some massive quality time with your Toyota (which I won't point out as inferior to Datsun) you're probably going to be better off selling and getting a mid-90s rig with maybe high mileage but mechanically sound for the most part. Spending all your waking moments working on a car isn't having a reliable car. It's having a project car. I have now gutted the 510 for the second time, and it it's previous version it took me 3 years to get it ready to roll. Link to comment
MicroMachinery Posted August 26, 2012 Report Share Posted August 26, 2012 Jalen, it's important that you understand the systems and their functions, how they work, and what components are necessary to make them work. Just getting a solution for your current problem will hurt you in the long run. The problem isn't that your coil isn't connected to your distributor, or that your points are out of adjustment; it's that you don't know why it's a problem that your coil isn't connected to your distributor, or that your points are out of adjustment. Have you ever heard the expression, "Give a man a fish, feed him for a day; teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime"? Mostly everybody here(in one way or another) is trying to teach you "how to fish". It speaks of the gaining the power to create your own solutions, rather than just being given a single, temporary solution. The factory service manual provides you information for your car specifically, but perhaps you need to go a step further and watch some videos, or read some books on basic automotive fundamentals and troubleshooting. Youtube has plenty of short length videos for the Do It Yourself beginner. Nobody's going to fault you for trying to learn, but you need to LISTEN to what they're saying. Nobody who works cars(without somebody with experience standing there holding their hand) was just born with the knowledge. They had to get it, whether by schooling, reading, or by being around someone who could teach them. It's not a natural ability, but understanding predictable situations with predictable outcomes is. There's nothing magical about how any systems on a car work. Electricity has a few proven laws. The same goes with Physics and Hydraulics. Maybe I'm saying too much, but if you take a few small steps at a time, you'll learn that the way a complete machine functions is very predictable, once you break it down into simpler systems. I encourage you to get knowledge first, which will in turn lead you to correct, predictable solutions. 6 Link to comment
the nice machine Posted August 26, 2012 Report Share Posted August 26, 2012 ^^^^ AGREED. You have to learn how to learn. Learning is a skill that you can develop over time. Link to comment
bananahamuck Posted August 26, 2012 Report Share Posted August 26, 2012 Jalen, it's important that you understand the systems and their functions, how they work, and what components are necessary to make them work. Just getting a solution for your current problem will hurt you in the long run. The problem isn't that your coil isn't connected to your distributor, or that your points are out of adjustment; it's that you don't know why it's a problem that your coil isn't connected to your distributor, or that your points are out of adjustment. Have you ever heard the expression, "Give a man a fish, feed him for a day; teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime"? Mostly everybody here(in one way or another) is trying to teach you "how to fish". It speaks of the gaining the power to create your own solutions, rather than just being given a single, temporary solution. The factory service manual provides you information for your car specifically, but perhaps you need to go a step further and watch some videos, or read some books on basic automotive fundamentals and troubleshooting. Youtube has plenty of short length videos for the Do It Yourself beginner. Nobody's going to fault you for trying to learn, but you need to LISTEN to what they're saying. Nobody who works cars(without somebody with experience standing there holding their hand) was just born with the knowledge. They had to get it, whether by schooling, reading, or by being around someone who could teach them. It's not a natural ability, but understanding predictable situations with predictable outcomes is. There's nothing magical about any systems on a car work. Electricity has a few proven laws. The same goes with Physics and Hydraulics. Maybe I'm saying to much, but if you take a few small steps at a time, you'll learn that the way a machine functions is very predictable, once you break it down into simpler systems. I encourage you to get knowledge first, which will in turn lead you to correct, predictable solutions. Ok, you lost me... Where am i supposed to hook up the fish again??? 2 Link to comment
DAT510 Posted August 26, 2012 Report Share Posted August 26, 2012 ong bak putang ina mo buck la Link to comment
MicroMachinery Posted August 26, 2012 Report Share Posted August 26, 2012 Ok, you lost me... Where am i supposed to hook up the fish again??? :lol: Link to comment
Skib Posted August 26, 2012 Report Share Posted August 26, 2012 really? 6 pages to figure out where to mount on neg coil wire and adjust points? 2 Link to comment
Jimmyray73 Posted August 26, 2012 Report Share Posted August 26, 2012 "Give a man a fish, feed him for a day; teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime"? I was once told by a wise man "Build a man a fire and you keep him warm for a night. Set a man on fire and you keep him warm for the rest of his life." 2 Link to comment
HRH Posted August 27, 2012 Report Share Posted August 27, 2012 You do realize "success" is misspelled? :D 4 Link to comment
jalen Posted August 27, 2012 Author Report Share Posted August 27, 2012 Everything is figures out, I don't get why people are still posting in here haha Link to comment
Tristin Posted August 28, 2012 Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 *cough* http://seattle.craigslist.org/sno/cto/3234157413.html *cough* Link to comment
jalen Posted August 28, 2012 Author Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 Tristin thanks. And hrh everything on this forum is usually misspelled. There is a few typos in the ad I have to fix. Link to comment
Tice Posted August 28, 2012 Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 ^ A "Few"? haha ok... Link to comment
]2eDeYe Posted August 28, 2012 Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 Everything is figures out, I don't get why people are still posting in here haha *cough* http://seattle.craig...3234157413.html *cough* Wow... ...and it still doesn't run... :rolleyes: Link to comment
the nice machine Posted August 28, 2012 Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 *cough* http://seattle.craig...3234157413.html *cough* Okay, i just spat my coffee all over the place when i read this ad. By spoonfeeding information to this disrespectful little troll you aren't helping a ratsun member get his car on the road, you are teaching this kid to "flip" cars. As entertaining as they are, this is the last jalen thread i will be reading. Where is the "ignore" button??? Link to comment
Skib Posted August 28, 2012 Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 here.... just take this and go. because your just going to keep trading for cars that could have been saved and making them worse. and eventually your going to just end up getting one anyway, so just take it now. until you can understand the basics of mechanical and electrical theory.... stop buying J-tin. because you clearly do not. 2 Link to comment
jalen Posted August 28, 2012 Author Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 I understand mechanical things on the car and I now have a week in 2 days to have a daily driver. I would love to daily drive this car, I have ha 2 mechanics come look at this car and they couldn't figure it out either. If the fsm comes in very soon and I can get if running ill keep the car. Hence why the add says feeler. Link to comment
Tristin Posted August 28, 2012 Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 So two mechanics came to look at the car and they couldnt figure out a car made in the 60s? Theres like 5 parts to the engine. A lot of people here have been giving you the benefit of the doubt thread after thread and its getting tiring. A lot of us arent going to help out anymore when you keep doing this. I for one am out. Hopefully you get wise and get your shit straight. 1 Link to comment
q-tip Posted August 28, 2012 Report Share Posted August 28, 2012 air fuel spark compression, you must have all of these thing for an engine to run, and check in that order. like skib said, get a civic Link to comment
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