This is my first time even trying to post a build thread. Constructive criticism is happily accepted.
My project is a 1989 Merkur XR4Ti, one of the last of the late great turbo Fords of the 1980s. The Merkur uses the same 2.3L turbo engine found in the Thunderbird Turbo Coupe and the SVO Mustang, and when they're running right, they are a blast to drive. Unfortunately, in their later years they usually become garage queens, and mine is no exception. This is why I call her the Black Death...because she's black, and spends a lot of time dead.
What I'm working on now is a drivability issue -- no power and running rich as you-know-what. Last week I found an exhaust leak in the turbo discharge elbow, right before the O2 sensor -- aha! Some air getting in here screwing up what the sensor sees! After soaking the bolts in WD-40 over the past week I decided today was a good day to pry it l oose.
Here's the elbow in its natural habitat, installed on the engine:
Whee! Won't this be fun? A couple of the bolts -- there are five in total at the turbo and two at the header pipe -- are easy to get to, but even at their best there's not a lot of room. So...first bolt comes out no problems. Second bolt -- SNAP! Third bolt -- SNAP! Fourth bolt -- SNAP!
Okay, so far not so good. Time to go under the car. Disconnect the wastegate control arm and get on the fifth bolt -- SNAP! Man, I'm not doing so well on this today. Whose bright idea was it to use these little bitty bolts on an exhaust part, anyway?
Here's a look at the elbow on my workbench:
Definitely some buildup there, and a steel rule laid across it tells me it's not quite even, so off to a machine shop it goes to get smoothed out! Tell me why Ford decided to not use a gasket between these parts. If there had been one, maybe I wouldn't have had a leak there, and maybe I wouldn't have broken four of the five bolts on this sucker!
The next step will be to pull the turbo so I can see about getting the broken bolts out! Won't that be fun?