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Total 30 documents matching your query.

1. RE: Brake Adjustment Question (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Mon, 3 Jan 2005 17:53:34 -0500
I'm with Ron on this one. My factory brake training (EIS/Wagner brake Rep) taught me that discs should drag slightly and drums run free, that's why they're spring (un)loaded. 75-90% of your braking i
/html/tigers/2005-01/msg00025.html (8,153 bytes)

2. Re: Brakes and Transmission problem (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2004 10:21:28 -0500
I believe I can help you with the brakes. The replacement (brake) master cylinders are built slightly different than the originals. If you look at the piece inside the master cylinder that the pushr
/html/tigers/2004-12/msg00143.html (9,160 bytes)

3. Re: Rear End Gear Ratios (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2004 08:40:49 -0700
Okay, I'll chime in. I have a 3.07 limited slip differential with a stock close ratio gearbox. This is behind a built 306 (dyno'd at 345hp). This is an acceptable arrangement, but not ideal. The orig
/html/tigers/2004-12/msg00144.html (8,535 bytes)

4. Re: Brakes and Transmission problem (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2004 12:37:32 -0700
Sorry Curt, guess I should have read your post a little more carefully. If you've fully drained the system pressure, then of course the wheels should move again under my scenario. Do the front wheels
/html/tigers/2004-12/msg00148.html (7,564 bytes)

5. Re: On the Subject of "Joey" (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2004 10:01:25 -0500
While we may have legitimate concerns based on our OWN bad choices, why shouldn't Joey have the same choices we did? Personally I believe that anyone who puts his own time and elbow grease into a ca
/html/tigers/2004-12/msg00287.html (10,017 bytes)

6. Re: Dr. Gas - Rationale (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Fri, 5 Nov 2004 13:20:57 -0500
The point of the crossover, as you may know but didn't make clear, is not just to equalize the pulses but use one pulse to "scavenge" the next. Just like drafting in bicycles (or NASCAR), each pulse
/html/tigers/2004-11/msg00020.html (7,868 bytes)

7. Fw: 5.0 HO (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Fri, 12 Nov 2004 13:29:48 -0700
Same width of block. Maybe they were thinking of the new modular motors; those are wider I believe. I have a later 302 in my Tiger; the bellhousing is different but the basic motor dimensions are the
/html/tigers/2004-11/msg00102.html (12,738 bytes)

8. Dual master cylinder (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Thu, 25 Nov 2004 13:49:58 -0700
Sorry to re-open a subject that has been covered in the past, but after searching the TU archives and my records I couldn't find any reference to it. For those of us who are considering switching to
/html/tigers/2004-11/msg00248.html (7,741 bytes)

9. Re: Nitrogen Enbrittlement (acid manifold porting) (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Thu, 21 Oct 2004 19:25:44 -0400
I can vouch for the price/HP effectiveness of Nitrous. My nearly stock 260 (torquer intake and 600cfm Edelbrock carb) was faster than my 345 HP 306ci is when not using the bottle. Having said that, r
/html/tigers/2004-10/msg00192.html (9,029 bytes)

10. Fw: Stopping - JUST THE FACTS, Ma'am! (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2004 10:12:27 -0400
Glad to see you locating Thanksgiving in October, where it so rightly belongs. Up here in God's country we've heard rumours of some such festival down there in the Big Smoke celebrated in November,
/html/tigers/2004-08/msg00176.html (10,158 bytes)

11. Re: High oil pressure (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2004 10:45:27 -0600
I agree with Steve on this one, the first thing you want to do with this is make sure of the problem. Check to make sure the pressure really is too high before you spend a lot of money chasing it. I
/html/tigers/2004-06/msg00181.html (8,410 bytes)

12. RE: last query before the plunge (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Tue, 4 May 2004 12:42:46 -0400
I can certainly understand the dilemma on wheels and tires. I kept my car as stock looking as possible for a long time (15 years?). This was partly to do with thrift (I'm a cheap so and so), partly f
/html/tigers/2004-05/msg00032.html (7,699 bytes)

13. RE: All Gassed Up (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Thu, 11 Dec 2003 09:42:31 -0700
Octane is another of those automotive topics where science and anecdotal experience are totally at odds with each other. High octane fuel is resistant to preignition, this allows you to run more adva
/html/tigers/2003-12/msg00044.html (7,357 bytes)

14. Re: Fw: car cover (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2003 10:44:37 -0500
Hi Steve, The e-mail I have for John is johnc@nait.ab.ca I think he said something about retiring from NAIT, but I think they give you the option of keeping the e-mail address. Years ago when I bough
/html/tigers/2003-11/msg00093.html (6,670 bytes)

15. Re: Distributor gear hassles. (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Thu, 14 Aug 2003 09:43:22 -0600
I'm sure you'll get many responses with far better information, but I seem to recall Ford switched distributor drives when they went electronic. The newer one was significantly harder, and one must
/html/tigers/2003-08/msg00080.html (8,819 bytes)

16. Re: sinking throttle pedal (score: 1)
Author: mmcbeth@peacock.ca
Date: Wed, 30 Jul 2003 10:14:42 -0400
Mine was a low tech solution, but I believe I just bent the throttle cable in a "U" shape past the holder. I'll have to crawl under my dash to be sure, but it seems to have held for 2 years or so. M
/html/tigers/2003-07/msg00283.html (11,106 bytes)

17. Water pump (score: 1)
Author: "Michael McBeth" <mmcbeth@peacock.ca>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2003 09:29:46 -0600
After bringing my Tiger out of hibernation this weekend I've discovered a significant coolant leak. I hoped it was just a hose, but no such luck. It is pretty hard to get any sight line on the locat
/html/tigers/2003-05/msg00119.html (7,146 bytes)

18. RE: Alpine brakes (score: 1)
Author: "Michael McBeth" <mmcbeth@peacock.ca>
Date: Fri, 1 Nov 2002 08:30:58 -0700
I'm pretty sure you still have the "pushrod too long" problem. The crucial part that is different when you change master cylinders is NOT the pushrod, it is the master cylinder piston that contacts
/html/tigers/2002-11/msg00000.html (9,256 bytes)

19. RE: Brake Lines (score: 1)
Author: "Michael McBeth" <mmcbeth@peacock.ca>
Date: Mon, 9 Sep 2002 19:38:25 -0600
I specialize in instrument tube fittings but I wouldn't (don't) use them as brake lines on a car. The reason tube fittings were invented was so they'd be easy for unskilled people to put together, n
/html/tigers/2002-09/msg00202.html (14,117 bytes)

20. Fulcrum pins (score: 1)
Author: "Michael McBeth" <mmcbeth@peacock.ca>
Date: Thu, 1 Aug 2002 14:56:22 -0600
It has been a slow day on the tiger list so let's raise a controversial subject. I'm tired of rivets, lets talk fulcrum pins. I am buying new (stronger) fulcrum pins for my upper and lower a-arms, an
/html/tigers/2002-08/msg00004.html (6,952 bytes)


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