Project ST165-ST205 Swap, Seems 6th gen relevant. |
Project ST165-ST205 Swap, Seems 6th gen relevant. |
Jul 8, 2015 - 9:24 AM |
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Enthusiast Joined May 15, '12 From Renton, WA Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
Not a 6th gen but a ST205 motor from a 6th gen! It feels relevant enough since I use this forum.
February 27th, 2015 Parts ordered for timing belt kit from PrimeMR2.com 3rd Gen 3SGTE from JspecAuto. $2295 shipped. http://www.jspecauto.com/engine_details/19...15_3S_3SGTE_GT4 Video of compression test: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_lWE693jFws March 11th, 2015 Picked up the car: The owner was an older gentlemen whose wife owned the car since new, purchased in Michael's Toyota in Bellevue. She passed away a few years ago and he just drove the car the weekends. The interior is absolutely immaculate. Seats were recently reupholstered. Everything works, including lumbar support and cruise control. The engine bay is clean but its leaking at the valve cover. Power delivery seems to be so so but the car has 200k+ miles. I'll get more pics later this evening. March 13th, 2015 Motor is delivered. Everything is settled in. Missing the MAP sensor and plug too though. April 17th, 2015 Timing belt. Looks like I need new cam seals and I stripped the philips screw on the water pump so that needed to be drilled out. Slight delay in finishing while I order those parts! Ordered this to assist. Milwaukee Fuel 3/8" lithium impact. AMAZING. I never want to use air tools again it was so amazing. April 28th, 2015 Finished the timing belt on the 3SGTE. New water pump, tensioners, pulleys, oil pump pulley seal, cam seals, and valve cover seals. May 1st, 2015 Timing belt all buttoned up. Berk ST205 downpipe received in the mail. Broke every god damn fuel injector clip. Ordered new ones. Boat anchor cat/downpipe removed. Oil cooler and HFH (Hoses from Hell) removed. Waiting to go on. They weren't this mangled before I removed them but they don't call them the HFH for nothing. May 3rd, 2015 Buttoned up the HFH install and downpipe. What a PITA that was... This is pretty much all the space I had to remove the clip holding the clamp in place. Either that or remove the entire exhaust manifold :what: Downpipe installed with this funny looking brace that took the OEM brace's place. Pretty much just waiting on the axle seals and the fuel injector clips to drop the motor in. It'll be time to pull the existing motor, replace some bits while I'm in there, and drop the motor in. :thumbup: May 8th, 2015 Started to take the original motor apart. Leaky turbo. No rusty battery tray! This insane telescopic looking alternator cooling dust. Also tested my new Milwaukee M18 Fuel 1/2" on the axle nut. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXL-wGfhhkU May 9th, 2015 I was planning on dropping the motor today but I ran into a snag after dropping the subframe and axles. Looks like one of the bolts on the downpipe are stripped. I'm going to need to cut/drill that out. May 13th, 2015 Engine is out. During the removal I forgot to drain the oil which resulted in 4 quarts of oil mixed with trans fluid and power steering fluid. Not fun. Also noticed the fuel filter bracket is missing. That will make for a difficult removal of the filter. Hard to tell from.the picture but its just floating by the fuel line. May 26th, 2015 Received my package from speed-source.net and proceeded to install the goodies inside. New shifter bushings to replace the worn rubber. [img]http://images.tapatalk-cdn.com/15/05/26/87fcf8af0997a70f0f6966edf9d962fa.jpg/[img] The stainless clutch line seems to be a bit shorter than the original. I couldn't find any comparison pictures so I shot an email to speed source. Hopefully they will clarify. May 30th, 2015 Motor is all buttoned up and ready to drop in so I started to work on the front suspension. First things first...something has to break The control arm nut inside the unibody snapped off, letting the bolt float freely. I had to drill under the drivers side floor pan to get to it. After that fiasco, I thought it would be best to just finish the drivers side and call it a day. Installed the powder coated knuckles with fresh bearings, new OEM ball joints, and then the coilovers... The Ceika coilover sleeves I got were incorrect for the front. I swapped them with the rears and they bolted on fine. I shot an email to them to see if I could get the correct sleeves for the front. Its been a few months since I've ordered them so I might be SOL since I didn't check when I first got them. May 31st, 2015 Installed the swaybar endlinks, stainless lines, and new rotors. The brake pads I got seem to be a little too thick and probably cheapies since they came free with the rotors. I think I'm going to look into either Toyota OEM pads or EBC greens. This little thing won't fit inside the other thing...sigh :banghead: I'll make it work. Also removed the FRAM fuel filter and replaced with OEM. The OEM one came with the proper bracket to mount to the chassis where the FRAM one was supported only by the fuel lines themselves :facepalm: I mean come on, really... June 7th, 2015 I forgot to take some more pictures but the engine is in. Motor mounts were a PITA to align but otherwise it went rather smoothly. June 15th, 2015 Some significant progress made. After some unsuccessful attempts at getting the AC to work with the ST205, I ended up pulling the entire system. I had left the original AC compressor and lines untouched with plans on mounting the ST165 compressor to the new block but it turns out it didn't quite fit into the new bracket and the old bracket wouldn't work. I then tried to swap the ST205 compressor in but the lines didn't quite match and I didn't have the complete lines. Oh well, made room for other things. Pile o' AC crap. In the process of pulling the AC lines, I cracked one of the rubber molded power steering hoses. With the car being 27 years old, its of course no longer available. With the AC gone, something will need to be done about the pulley that would be there. I found this thread on 6gc.net http://www.6gc.net/forums/index.php?showtopic=36671 detailing an OEM solution. I prompted ordered the parts from Amayama Trading. I also got a package from them the other day with some brand new parts, straight from Japan. New intake boot and intercooler coolant bottle. New heat exchanger with brackets that fit in factory mounting holes. I utilized the existing lines and pump for now. Ceika got back to me regarding the incorrect brackets for the ST165 and prompted shipped me a full set via DHL Overnight from Taiwan. Installed and looked great but I noticed that the brake line clip was completely different (and on the wrong side). At this point I'll live with it and make it work with some creative zip ties or something. While I was there, I finished up installing the OEM pads and OEM tie rod ends. I decided it would be a good time to check if the exhaust bolted to the MR2 downpipe. So far so good but the stock exhaust is in questionable shape. Stainless clutch line installed. Brass shifting bushings installed. Bent accelerator cable. Need to replace this. And I still need to source a transmission oil cooler. I would prefer to keep the factory lines but that is looking like less and less of an option. June 21st, 2015 Finished installing the front/rear motor mounts, crossmembers, and misc stuff underneath the car. Test fitted new catch can and hoses. Trying to figure out where this vacuum line goes. Installed the ST205 waterpipe from the intercooler but of course the lines extend way beyond the stock ST165 pump. I'm going to have to engineer this one. Instead of going with a complete aftermarket solution for the transmission cooler, I'm thinking of utilizing the existing hoses with some new flared lines based on the ones that were cut from the car. If I can get new lines clamped with rubber hoses to your run of the mill 13 row JDM crap, that will do just fine. I'll run these to home depot to see what size they are and order the appropriate lines online. June 27th, 2015 Few more bits sorted out. Fitted the ST205 stock airbox. It bolts with two of the factory ST165 bolt points which I'm just fine with. Installed the AC delete pulley and belt. Frozenboost oil cooler and AN lines from anplumbing.com installed. July 5th, 2015 The heat exchanger came with a Spal 12" so I went ahead and used that along with a new Flex-a-lite fan I ordered from summit. I wired both to individual 30amp relays triggered by the stock fan harness and they work beautifully. They are both set to pull air into the engine bay. Not sure why the last picture is poor quality but I got lazy and didn't extend the wiring when I should have as you can (kinda) see when I sleeved the wires. |
Oct 4, 2015 - 10:46 AM |
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Enthusiast Joined Apr 17, '10 From U.P. michigan GO STATE Currently Offline Reputation: 3 (100%) |
Great build! I really like the boost gauge in the cluster! Also why so light on the boost, that 205 engine would love it if you turned up to 15lbs
-------------------- It takes 8,460 bolts to assemble an automobile, and one nut to scatter it all over the road.
Celica: The name is derived from the Spanish word for "heavenly" or "celestial". Back-2-Back July COTM 15&16 |
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