My Indecisive 4.0 V8 1UZ-FE Project
My Indecisive 4.0 V8 1UZ-FE Project
I am still waiting on their response to which Speedo converter to use - I have gone elsewhere.
Must admit the bad I've heard about Thor far outweighs the good.
Not all front pulleys are the same dia on the various iterations of the Lexus/Toyota V8, when I designed the tensioner system you bought from thor it was for the most readily available engine...LS400... it would appear that when you changed the front pulley you used the smaller dia sc400 part hence the belt that they supplied being too long. Hope this helps you.
Roger Smith http://sjperformanceengineering.co.uk
More engine mounting fun yesterday.
These are the mods I've made to the subframe. As previously mentioned I'd cut the box towers off, I've also found that the soarer oil pan is not perfectly central on the engine - the upper sump is not symmetrical as it has the dipstick hole and the oil level sensor hole on one side, so that side is slightly larger.
As a result the oil pan doesn't quite sit in the hole in the middle of the subframe. So I trimmed one of the bars back about 10mm (marked in red) and now it sits in there lovely:
I will add some gusseting between the 2 bars as this one is now significantly weaker. This has now dropped the engine right down, to nearly the perfect level, but it's still inclined upwards by about 7 degrees. I'd like it to be as level as possible...
Next problem is the rubber doughnut bit of the engine mount on the driver's side.
You can see that with the box mount gone from the subframe, there isn't enough space in there for the doughnut to miss the steering UJ. I need to come up with something much thinner! TBH I am thinking about solid mounting the engine, it's soooo smooth I don't think it needs that much isolation!
Did some more on the RX7 today. Binned off all the hydraulics (including all the ABS gumph) so that I could fit the heads on the test engine without it hitting anything.
I then hacked the rear bin kit apart so the battery fits nicely and test fitted that too. Took a while to get it spot on and had to be really careful not to scratch it at all.
The battery doesn't quite sit where I wanted but I've got access to the terminals and it's the only flat bit of the floor. Obviously I need to strap it down still but it's as good as it's going to get.
Nice mate! You decided what your doing with the pedals?