Finally, on February 11th, it made its journey indoors under the propulsion of its original B6 for the last time. The little 1.6L had lasted 28 years and 140k miles, but was starting to leak oil from every orifice, smoked a little under hard acceleration and was making 15psi of oil pressure under hot idle. It had started to develop some piston slap under cold startup, as well as the usual lifter rattle when hot.
Also, in the above photo, note that this is essentially being done in a single car garage without a lift, and without the major use of any power tools. There is an air compressor but it's very inefficient and noisy and irritates the hell out of me. I did use a Snap-On cordless impact for some stuff like the powerplant frame bolts though
Removed and tossed the A/C system. It was still charged with R12 and operational, but I rarely used it up here in New York's more temperate climate, and with the supercharger going in, I wanted every bit of air going through the radiator and intercooler. I couldn't get any of the inline fittings or the fittings at the condenser to separate, so I had to pull the complete lines and condenser. And then broke a bolt off in the compressor.
So long weirdo restrictive flappy-door air flow meter, you won't be missed. A GM IAT and a MAP sensor with Megasquirt will instead be taking over from here on out. And deleting the AFM allows me to keep my cruise control, which makes me happy.
But first, we discovered that even with the front bumper and crash support removed, the Harbor Freight 1-ton engine hoist with load leveler still won't reach the engine. So Dad took it down to the old '40s Craftsman drill press in his basement and did some modifications to it. Kids, don't try this at home, please.
Surprisingly there was very little jockeying to remove the entire driveline assembly, although we had to angle it pretty severely. I wanted to take a Slim Pickens/Dr. Strangelove pose on the removed driveline, but others were not so amused by the idea.
So long, little 1.6L. Not sure what I'm going to do with it at this point. It still ran okay. Maybe freshen it up and drop it in something else. I'm not sure. Also, that motor mount lying on the floor had the rubber completely ripped in 2. And it appeared to have been that way for a while.
The engine bay is rather gooey.