Flossie
Well-Known Member
Nah....Yes Sort of in the shelf on the front below the window - it’s supposed to be there ! It’s just that I was expecting to be able to open the flaps and look out
Nah....Yes Sort of in the shelf on the front below the window - it’s supposed to be there ! It’s just that I was expecting to be able to open the flaps and look out
Ive ran a 19J for 13 years now, nothing wrong with them.
How many miles in them 13 years?
You can cut holes in the plastic vent covers to see through them fully, then stick some cardboard over the windows and drive around like you’re in a tank.
Add a piece of plastic down pipe to the roof for added gun effect.Sweet idea ! Going to have a little tinker with it tomorrow - mole grips and lump hammer at the ready
Daily drive, the engine I have now has well over 250k on it, the one before that (drove it into a pond and bent a rod) had around 180k on it. They are good wee engines if you look after them.
What technique is that then? Any pics of the engine? Some were better than others.
Should only take 6 seconds on the glow plugs , anything more and you will burn them out. NGK (which is what you should have in there) recommend 6 seconds, I know its a pre combustion chambered indirect injection engine but really 6 seconds is all you need. They are good starting engines when they run right, a good battery is a must though, they need a fast spin on the starter.
John Craddock or Paddock spares will have just about everything you need (except a 200 Tdi and a bank loan).
Maybe some new glow plugs are in order ! I did think it was a bit long to heat them for but that was the way he did it and said it always started after a bit of cranking.
The battery might need to be changed as well as I left the lights on for a few hours the other evening and that was enough so it wouldn’t start in the morning !
Any tips on where to get The NGK glow plugs ? I tried a local motor factor and they didn’t have glow plugs for my 1988 model 90
Im pretty sure you want NGK Y-907R , cross reference that first though, and be careful on eBay, lots of junk and fakes on there, you get what you pay for.