Radiator looks like it fits good enough. By the way I like the "drive over " exhaust video. Way cool.
Back from the muffler shop with my new dual exhaust. I had Magnaflow mufflers installed. Sounds like I wanted. The less Swiss cheesy exhaust really shows of my oil burning now
Here are some videos:
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So I was in Hutch yesterday... looking for someones house to buy something off marketplace... Turned a corner and BAM there was THIS dart! I'll have to go visit it in the Duster when I'm done painting it!
Did you see the big trans fluid stain? I found out I have a major leak somewhere in the transmission when parked front end down. Also last time I drove to Wichita I realized my short piece of fuel line between the pickup and the fuel line had a huge hole. I can't believe I made it back home. By the time I pulled into the driveway it wouldn't even pickup fuel anymore. I pushed it out of the driveway to where you saw it. Then all the fluid poured out.
It's been too hot to do anything and I'm busy getting ready to move. If you saw the house with a bunch of furniture on the porch, that was me. We are currently living in the RV in the driveway. Hoping to move to the Lawrence area after getting the house on the market.
I bought fuel line and transmission fluid yesterday and it's cooler today so I may finally move the Dart. You got to witness the "Before and After" Dart as you drove by it with he passenger side still in need of rust repair and the driver's side all painted up.
I was going to mention the passenger side rust but didn't want to give any secrets away to the viewers. I noticed the big moving truck too. I wondered why you parked it facing the sun all day haha.
That is very cool! Cool you still have the same "handle" I have had dartfreak75 since i was 15 when I was in high school shortly after I had bought my dart I had to create a email for some reason (cant remember why now) but the email I created was dartfreak75@****.com and it stuck. I have used it ever sinceI'm still not done packing up and getting repairs to my house done in preparation for selling. I did find this though while packing and going through boxes. The keys to my first Dart. I haven't seen these for nearly 30 years!
I did finally fix the fuel line on the current Dart and have been driving it quite a bit now. The transmission I built and installed is working great, just need to find some time to crawl under and find out where my trans fluid leak is. If I park nose down it leaks out badly. I'm thinking it is probably the dipstick, either the one in the transmission or the one who put the pan gasket on.
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That is very cool! Cool you still have the same "handle" I have had dartfreak75 since i was 15 when I was in high school shortly after I had bought my dart I had to create a email for some reason (cant remember why now) but the email I created was dartfreak75@****.com and it stuck. I have used it ever since
Yeah, I was telling my brother-in-law the same thing. That they are not designed to pop out when it freezes, just casting holes, they are just marketed as freeze plugs. I'm guessing this was more likely a rust failure, just coincidentally timed with the cold weather. It was fine during the cold snap last winter and nothing has changed coolant wise since then.Knock them out and install marine grade brass plugs. Then you will never worry about it again. BTW these are not called "Freeze plugs" they do not pop out automatically if the block freezes. The block will likely crack if it freezes. Sometimes they pop out under pressure when that happens, but it's not a feature they were designed for.
the proper terminology is "core plug". These machined holes with metal plugs hammered in them are the final finishing process from the rough casting holes left behind from the supports of the casting sand that was used to create the water jackets when the block was sand cast. They are machined and plugged to hold coolant.
I beg to differ. YES, they are called freeze plugs. I've worked on cars for almost fifty years and I've never heard anyone refer to them as core plugs. Maybe it's a regional thing? I get how the holes were made, but I find it interesting that it popped loose when it was -4 degrees last week also.Knock them out and install marine grade brass plugs. Then you will never worry about it again. BTW these are not called "Freeze plugs" they do not pop out automatically if the block freezes. The block will likely crack if it freezes. Sometimes they pop out under pressure when that happens, but it's not a feature they were designed for.
the proper terminology is "core plug". These machined holes with metal plugs hammered in them are the final finishing process from the rough casting holes left behind from the supports of the casting sand that was used to create the water jackets when the block was sand cast. They are machined and plugged to hold coolant.
We'll see this weekend when I get the transmission out. The amount coming out seems like a pop-out situation. Could still be a coincidental rusted one.I beg to differ. YES, they are called freeze plugs. I've worked on cars for almost fifty years and I've never heard anyone refer to them as core plugs. Maybe it's a regional thing? I get how the holes were made, but I find it interesting that it popped loose when it was -4 degrees last week also.
Not looking to argue. You stated your opinion and I stated mine.
Nope. Core plugs. Not regional nomenclature either. Ask any professional machinest what they are called. Not joe blow at the around the corner garage. I looked up core plug on the internet. 3 screen shots in about 30 seconds. They may pop out in negative temps, but that's not what they are designed to do. If they are starting to corrode, sure a frozen block will pop them out, but more than likely if they are new and tight, the block will crack before they pop. They are not a fail safe for a frozen block. I bought a charger with a rebuilt 440 that the idiot left water in over the winter. None of the brass "core plugs" popped, the lifter valley was loaded with cracks in the water jacketed areas above the lifters on both sides with rust weeping out of the cracks.I beg to differ. YES, they are called freeze plugs. I've worked on cars for almost fifty years and I've never heard anyone refer to them as core plugs. Maybe it's a regional thing? I get how the holes were made, but I find it interesting that it popped loose when it was -4 degrees last week also.
Not looking to argue. You stated your opinion and I stated mine.
@moparmat2000 Happy New Year!Not looking to argue. You stated your opinion and I stated mine.
Happy new year to you and all my A body friends as well.@moparmat2000 Happy New Year!