I threw in the towel on the 70 dollar waste of money today (the FPR)... I went to the junkyard in search of a front driveshaft for the cardan joint, along with a speed sensor with mechanical speedometer. While there, I decided to grab the fuel rail off the 94 'kee I've been poking, prodding and picking from for a while...
Out of the three things I spent hours in the deep mud and water looking for, and removing, I only got to install one of them today >_<. On top of that, the city will very soon start fining me for having the car outside without plates, so my brother came over earlier today to (attempt) to help me get the car in the garage. Only then does a driveway angle become extremely apparent..... Needless to say, the car's parked in front of the house now, after three tries. At least now, I'll be working on pavement, for the first time in six months, which anymore is a luxury to me. The car cover he bought, that I picked, was too small, and was the last line of defense against the biggest HOA in fricking Denver... Ugh.
The cherokee driveshaft just happens to be way too long, by several inches, as my ignorance showed me today...
It doesn't look like it, but it is with the cardan joint, which I needed because the 231 and up (maybe lower, dunno) t-cases use U-bolt yokes. I was expecting the cardan joint to be a separate entity from the driveshaft, but apparently not. So that's unusable jeep driveshaft number 4 cluttering my garage floor now.
And, (not so) new fuel rail:
I forgot how much of a PITA it can be to install a fuel rail and injectors when the rubber grommets don't want to slide in. A little saliva around each rubber ring fixes that, as it dries quickly. Of the pair of fuel lines that came with the wiring harness I bought on craigslist months ago, only one of them works for my rail, as the other is clogged with orange gunk. At least I remembered to keep the plastic snaps for the quick connects on the lines. I have to run to the yard again on Weds for, hopefully, the LAST of the stuff I need for the car. I can't use my pretty white 92 valve cover, thanks to the twist and lock pcv valves being completely out of production and off store shelves (hesco included). I have to get the valve cover from that 94 when I go, if it's still there, along with some more engine bay fuel line. Normally, the elbows of every single jeep pcv valve in the yard are broken off, but I was lucky enough to be out on a warm day for that 96 clutch master, and snagged a set of good ones while I was at it. I wish I had the time to justify painting the upcoming valvecover...
And finally, the one significant accomplishment today that might actually help others out significantly as well. I discovered how to adapt a vehicle speed sensor with cable driven speedometer , without attaching it to the transfer case, since our eagles use a rather unique transfer case cable input. First, the sensor, grabbed from an early 90's Dakota pickup (that also had an AX15 on it....)
Second, the piece needed: (sorry for bad pics, I've been too busy to charge the batteries for my decent camera)
If I recall correctly, 1/2" to 3/8" steel pipe bushing. Some electrical tape has to be used around the threads, so the large end of the bushing will catch the threads in the speed sensor. The cable side (on stock setup) of the speed sensor is exactly the same size as the speedo cable input on the back of the instrument cluster, and the 3/8" bushing is a near-perfect fit for both. Again though, you'll need Teflon or electrical tape around the speedo and bushing threads..
It is a rather unorthodox way to do it, but it is just a simple sensor that derives electrical energy from kinetic energy, and I doubt the sensor has a designated direction built into it, so it should work out.
And of course, the not so fun part:
Broken tip. Took me two minutes flat to pull the instrument cluster out, I've become well versed in it as this was my fourth or fifth time at it >_<. This time though, I'm going to hook up the tach while the cluster is out... The problem is, where does the yellow wire go? I know where the green goes....