Took a quick run to the scrapyard first thing this morning. Bye bye old POS. And hey, they gave me $101.60 for it, which is $100 more than I would have taken for it lol...
With that out of the way, and some stuff in from Rockauto, I got to doing some transmission refresh. First order of business was to pull the bellhousing to get to the input shaft seal, which clearly had a leak judging by all the oil all over the inside of the bellhousing. So got that off and cleaned up the transmission face.
With the bellhousing off, figured I'd scrub it clean and do some painting, just for the hell of it, and because I have to get rid of this half a can of red engine paint before it loses its pressure...
After doing the seal, put the bellhousing back on, cleaned up the clutch fork and loose-fitted the new slave cylinder (mostly just to keep it out of the way)
So the clutch fork "boot" has a tear in it. Need to see if I can find a new one - but its likely one of those hard-to-find parts that costs way moer than it should. May try to fix it up with some rubber cement, IDK.....
Did the two output seals on the transfer case as well
So I got a full gasket kit for the trans with the thought of replacing some of the gaskets, but it looks like the one they sent (which is the right part number according to Fel-Pro) is incorrect, because none of these gaskets appear to be the correct size for anything on this transmission. I suspect it's for the 4-cyl manual transmission, even though it's listed as for the V6.
This time decided to spare my back and take it off my workbench the easy way...
While I had the engine hoist out, figured I might as well put the engine on a stand so I can do some work on it in the near future. So pulled the clutch and flywheel and mounted it up, though took me a while to find long enough bolts to bolt it to the stand (ironically, used some leftover e30 transmission bolts).
The clutch looked good on one side but was pretty worn on the other, so figure it must have a weak spring or something, IDK....going to replace it anyhow since clutches for these things are pretty cheap. The flywheel looks to be in good shape, though the pilot bearing was probably original and not smooth at all. Popped a new one in so that's one less thing to think about later.
Didn't want to mess with the engine today, so decided to swap the speedometer cables (though later I realized I didn't need to). Of course, that meant pulling the brake booster to access the grommet. Good, I needed to do that anyhow. Pulled the master cylinder and booster and routed the new speedo cable. That's the grommet hole at the bottom.
While I had it out, figured I'd kill off that red paint can for good. Why not.....brake boosters need some bling, right?
While at it, I decided to rebuilt the master cylinder with a kit I've had sitting around. Took me a while before I figured out I needed to remove the little set-screw near the back in order to get the inner piston out. Anyhow, bores look good, put new pistons/springs in, cleaned up everything, put it back together with some new copper washers on the splitter joint.