H'mmmm, turbos. We'll just have to see what appears on the IOW this summer, but the priority has to be safety before any further significant sums go on motive power.
Sorry for a totaly noobie question, but a syncro is a four wheel drive golf right? Were/Are they rare? An expensive 'extra' option? A limited edition? Ive had a look on google but there isnt much info.
650 RHD Golf Syncros were built and delivered into the UK.
115 RHD Jetta Syncros were built and delivered into the UK.
It was a CL spec Golf running a 1.8 carb motor that cost about the same as a 16V GTI.
It was available 87-91. The Golf3 was only available with Syncro transmission in LHD format.
Did you buy the MS as a kit and build it up yourself? If so how much and where from?
I bought it as a kit, with a loom. I bought the wideband control box as a kit.
The MS kit and loom cost about £200.
The Wideband lambda cost about £100, plus £70 for the sensor.
I just spent £100 on connectors, the new fusebox and mini-blade fuses. I had sufficient relays so I didn't need to buy any.
DannyP's built both boxes....... well he actually built my MS box, the one for the MG and his..... and the wideband control boxes for all three motors.
Also interested to see if you can set up the tuning yourself via laptop or whether you are going to need it set up on a rolling road tune - no doubt you and Danny will astonish me and get it set up between you both.
The wideband should enable us to get the fueling right throughout. That's the reason it was bought. We need a base ignition map to work with. REALLY good knock boxes are
seriously expensive. Danny's working on a knock solution, but it's not there yet, so the auto-tune for the ignition map isn't ready to go yet.
So, we can get the fueling set up on the road, with a laptop and some cunning software.
Could I have done it without DannyP?
No.
Watching him apply resistors and diodes to the loom to protect the ECU and deliver clean signals to it, you need to have serious and extensive experience of this kit. In addition to that you need the ability to understand how an engine should sound and why it sounds like it does, so you can get things up and running initially.
If it had been me on my own I would have needed to buy a pre-built kit and stick to a proven set of sensors etc, or I'd have been scrabbling about in the dark VERY gormlessly. I would have probably headed off down the Emerald or other non-open source route and there's nothing wrong with that..... except you're hog-tied into the whole package and the vendor supplied bits..... and some of those bits are
seriously marked up!
Don't get me wrong - I pulled out the loom from a Subaru Legacy and got it sorted to run in my T25 Syncro, but this is so far ahead of that in tech and knowledge requirements it's untrue.
ITBs, h'mmm. Danny's got a set he's testing on his ABF, so it'd definitely be worth your while talking to him about them. If you needed a stub manifold to suit, Dave at
www.futbus.com would be able to help out - he did the one for the MG.
Talk to Danny about a solution for your car, but you'll need to take it to a rolling road to get it dialed in properly whoever builds the management package for it.