Okay. Several small items to catch up on.
The front shocks got a quick rebuild, as both had quite a bit of fluid in the reservoir.
View attachment IMG_2749.mp4
I was concerned that all the suspension cycling at zero gauge pressure might have pushed some amount of fluid passed the IFP, but Adam disagreed. He is of the opinion that they were just assembled incorrectly by King, since both were in the exact same condition. They test and assemble all their cars with shocks at zero pressure with no problems like this. A problem like this is more common in a car that’s been run hard.
The rears were fine. They’re all back together, in the truck, and fully charged. The drive home went well. The locker functions like a normal Detroit, and does so quietly.
Back at the shop, the transfer case vent needed rework, and the turbo was weeping oil into the exhaust. The first part was easy to fix, and I just redeployed my old temporary catch bottle. The second required me to make an all new turbo drain.
The old 1/2” banks stuff for comparison.
At 4x the area, it drains just right, and has plenty of capacity to keep the bearing cavity from filling up and weeping into the other housings. This was actually an overdue upgrade, since the HE351CW has a much larger drain that the tiny T04B or TE06H that drain tube is sized for.
Back to fabricating the passenger fender, finishing up the lighting, and putting more miles on this setup. This suspension is so well controlled, It’s a joy to drive.
David