RE: 504 79 D - Legal at last, and a few questions

From: Steve Leung (firepiston@juno.com)
Date: Wed 26 Apr 2000 - 16:12:28 UTC

  • Next message: Dan Midtdal: "Re: 504 79 D - Changing coolant?"

    Kevin,
    Congrats passing inspection. If the turn signal is anything like a 604 or 505, there is a tab on the column that uses friction against a collar that does the cancelling. Open it and turn the steering wheel and you will see how it works. Sometimes the tab gets misaligned during wheel alignment and the cancellation stops working and you have to either move the tab or redo the wheel alignment so the tab is in the right place.

    The tie rod end has a taper fit. If it went in straight and not skewed, the weight of the suspension should keep it in place. Torque the nut to spec. Check that there is no space underneath and also compare it to the other side.

    Free tool loan program is great! FYI- Pepboys has a similar program. -Steve

    ------Original
    From: Kevin Rhodes <krhodes1@maine.rr.com>
    To: peugeot-l@egroups.com
    Sent: April 26, 2000 1:25:54 PM GMT
    Subject: 504 79 D - Legal at last, and a few questions

    Annette, my lovely Seafoam 79 504D passed her first Maine safety inspection
    with flying colors last night! Yeah! Many comments from all the mechanics
    on how they hadn't seen such a nice one in years, and evidently it took
    about four of them together to figure out how the lights and horn worked -
    he, he, he! I warned them, and left my cell phone number in case they
    couldn't figure it out. This was at Sears Automotive.

    Anyone want a complete set of original 1979 vintage sealed beam headlights?
    I swapped in a set of Hella's, as the originals where roughly 1.25
    candlepower. I have a "little black book" where the previous owner noted
    every cent ever spent on the car - including every time he filled the car
    with fuel - no mention of the headlights ever having been changed - amazing!

    I was having a weird turn signal issue - they were automatic, i.e. turn the
    wheel and the turn signal turns on! Convenient and annoying in equal
    measure. I took the wheel off and there was this long spring wrapped around
    the steering wheel shaft and connected to the turn signal mechanism. I
    sprayed it with some lubricant. Now they are not automatic anymore, but
    they don't self cancel either. Should they? I totally don't get how that
    arrangement is supposed to work. Not a big deal, my Triumph doesn't have
    self cancelling indicators either.

    I also had to replace the passenger side steering rack boot. I managed it,
    but in case I ever have to do it again, does the post that the power
    steering ram attaches to come off? I managed to stretch the boot over it
    with a long screwdriver and much swearing, but there has GOT to be an
    easier way - I was sure I was going to rip the thing, and I soaked it in
    boiling water first.

    Also as part of the rack boot install I had to separate the tie rod end on
    that side. How do you know when it is back together correctly? Is it
    supposed to "snap" into place? I have the nut as tight as it will go, but I
    am semi-certain that there was more of the bolt sticking out of the nut before.

    Next up is to replace the heater fan - shudder - looks like I get to spend
    Saturday doing that.... Luckily the one I picked up at the junkyard works
    great.

    A tip for those in the Northeast - VIP Discount auto has a terrific
    loan-a-tool program. Free too! They just take a deposit, and you get the
    tool for five days. I borrowed a tie rod separator. They have all kinds of
    useful stuff. I wish I had known about it last month, would have saved a
    bundle on some things I bought while working on my Triumph.

    Thanks for any and all advice
    Kevin Rhodes
    Portland, Maine
    92 505 SW8 Babbette
    85 505S TD Claudette
    79 504D Annette
    74 Triumph Spitfire Freddy

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