robwright
New member
Oli no offence taken at all mate. I love a good healthy debate and a lot of what you said does make sense. Why should I bother when the car runs perfectly OK. And there in lies the problem it is just OK. A lot of what Simon said is actually true also. I do feel a commitment to the car and if it were about rational thinking then I would have gotten rid of it as soon as the clutch packed up or maybe even sooner after I had my initial Turbo thrill. But no I chose to repair the clutch and carry out a good deal of restoration along the way. The fact I chose to do the clutch myself was not just driven by my sheer tight fistedness but the want to do it myself. I enjoy working on the car as much as I enjoy driving it. Now that I have convinced myself that I will do it I am actually looking forward to the challenge. You must also figure in the practical side as well. Once you start to modify your Turbo you do leave yourself wide open to other issues. Head gaskets etc etc etc. Running a car with high boost requires fuel and if your compresion isn't up to standard then this as in my case leads to very rich mixtures at high boost as some of it is being lost into the crankcase but the ECU doesn't know this and can't compensate. Too much fuel can in turn cause borewash, which itself will only exacerbate the problem. Bit of a catch 22 situation really but one which I have caused so must now remedy [
] Simon I too am committed to having working aircon. I have a new compressor, which I wasn't going to fit until I was ready but the old one was making a terrible racket!!! I also have a new receiver drier ready to fit. That will be fitted just prior to the gas going in. All that is required is to get a vacuum pulled on it to test for leaks and then hopefully get some modern r134a gas put into it as you can do if you change all the components. You should ideally change the expansion valve but this is easier said than done on 944s as it is buried behind the dasahboard [
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