|
Introduce yourself!! Tell me something about you and your history with rotary.. |
Welcome to Rotary Car Club. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us. |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
04-03-2012, 09:49 PM | #1 |
The Newbie
|
Allow myself to introduce.....myself.
Hello everyone, my name is Dex.
I recently purchased an old Rx7 off of an acquaintance who had adamantly been refusing to sell me this car for 5 years. The reason I have been so fixated with this particular car, is because it was the first RWD vehicle I have ever driven aggressively or thrown sideways in a corner. After nearly 5 years of my repeated attempts to arrive at a price, (as well as the pleas of various other potential owners) I finally procured the car, and spent most of the past winter tinkering with it and improving it until its current state. Sadly, after finally getting this thing plated and on the road last Friday, I blew and apex seal the very next day. Right now I'm in the process of sourcing another engine, but can't wait to get one swapped in so I can continue to enjoy it. |
04-03-2012, 10:10 PM | #2 |
Professional Stick Poker
|
Welcome, very pretty car. Tear the old engine down first and find out what went wrong. There are quite a few people selling parts all the time either here, other forums, or ebay. It'll save you a lot of headaches if you can fix yours. Used engines are always chancy, especially with rotaries, if they weren't stored correctly. They are not hard to rebuild, with quite a few shops around the country specializing in parts as well as complete rebuilds for them. The downside is that if you take it to a local garage they'll look at you like you're crazy. Be careful of who you have do a rebuild (doing it yourself is always good). Others, here and elsewhere, have a lot of horror stories of shoddy and ill informed rebuilders.
__________________
1979 SA22C (parts of one anyway) http://rotarycarclub.com/rotary_foru...ad.php?t=15585 1975 MG Midget (building) http://rotarycarclub.com/rotary_foru...ad.php?t=18681 1988 N/A SE model FC, dead stock and less than 85k on the clock. This one actually runs, so I don't fuck with it. |
04-03-2012, 10:24 PM | #3 |
The Newbie
|
That is a beautiful fb you have there one of the cleanest I have seen and nice set of wheels. And I second the comment on having a garage do the build inless they are highly knowledgeable on rotorys and as tempermental as they go I wouldn't waste it in buying a used one. Good luck on your car and look forward to seeing what it produces in the end
|
04-04-2012, 08:45 AM | #5 |
The Newbie
|
Thanks for the kind words everyone! I was planning on tearing the engine down this upcoming weekend. Don't get me wrong, If the rotors and housings are still in good shape and not completely grooved and scorched from that seal loosely bouncing around in there, then I will likely try and rebuild it myself. Especially if it is just something as trivial as replacing the seals.
As far as shops go, there are not an abundance of shops in the region (Ottawa) I would consider competent to handle an old rotary. In any case I would likely feel much better doing the work myself. As you guys have said, as well as many other rotary enthusiasts I have spoken with, these engines are not the most difficult thing in the world to work on yourself with a little patience. I'm only planning on swapping another 12a in a worst case scenario, to keep the car on the road until the end of summer, so that I can have the winter months to do a proper 13bt swap. I had hoped that the engine would have held up a little longer than this though. Haha |
04-04-2012, 09:30 AM | #6 |
Rotary Fanatic
|
Love the look of that thing, i realy think those wheels and tire setup looks awesome.
Atkins has a very good rebuild DVD, i'm in the process of tearing down and rebuilding my first rotary engine, and the dvd takes you thru every step. Good luck with you'r engine, hope it isn't to bad.. |
04-04-2012, 03:13 PM | #7 | |
The Newbie
|
Quote:
|
|
04-04-2012, 08:55 PM | #8 |
Professional Stick Poker
|
You might want to check out Fox's site for the factory manuals. He's up in your neck of the woods.
http://foxed.ca/index.php?page=rx7manual MUCH, better than a Haynes manual.
__________________
1979 SA22C (parts of one anyway) http://rotarycarclub.com/rotary_foru...ad.php?t=15585 1975 MG Midget (building) http://rotarycarclub.com/rotary_foru...ad.php?t=18681 1988 N/A SE model FC, dead stock and less than 85k on the clock. This one actually runs, so I don't fuck with it. |
04-14-2012, 10:02 AM | #11 |
The Newbie
|
Thanks! They are Rota Shakotans (Hyashi Street knockoffs from the 80's)
Oh and I finally got another 12a swapped into the car and thankfully it is running again, although I need to change a few gaskets that are being uncooperative. |