May be time to part company
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Mad Myche
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May be time to part company
It started with a simple flat tire... Broke out the scissors jack, started cranking her up. Settling and creaking started as the tire lost contact with the ground. Then crunches as the car dropped back down onto the tire. Right through the quasi-frame rail. Sniff sniff, whats that smell.... *dang*, jack sliced the gas line
~Mad Myche from Around Milwaukee~ wrote:Contrary to what some may think... I have not lost touch with reality, rather; reality cannot keep up with me
- J Wikoff
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2009 G8 GT - Location: Central Illinois
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Re: May be time to part company
Ouch.

WHITE WHINE - 1992 SSE Supercharged 236.26 ci (.040 Over) 15.090 at 90.2 MPH on old engine w/ slipping trans & melted O2 sensor - Gen 3 M62 and matching TB, Gen 2 Pully, Zillamotorsports Ported LIM, YT 1.72 Roller Rockers, SII FPR & Injectors, Hypertech Thermomaster chip w/ 160 Thermo, TransGo Shift Kit, Infinity/Pioneer Speakers & a 10" Alpine Type R Sub, all the watts, 140 amp Alternator, Ricepipe CAI w/ heatshield, Pilot Angel Eye Foglights, Clear Corners, '02 17" Chrome Bent 5's, Magnaflow F-Body Muffler and Hi-flo Cat, Ceramic Coated Ported Exhaust Manifolds, Fan Override, Monroe Reflex struts, red calipers
2009 G8 GT - Sport Red Metallic, loaded, SOLO Axlebacks, Rotofab Intake, Tuned, autodim mirror, removed intake manifold cover, HSV GTS triple gauge pod, two tone red-hot shifter and HSV SuperSport steering wheel, GXP rear sway bar and diffuser, 3.45 diff and various Camaro suspension bits, LED Taillights
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Bonneville92V688
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Re: May be time to part company
Sadly, this is where all of these cars are headed.
I've looked at a combination of 6 H-bodies (4 Bonnes and 2 88s) over the past few months, and nearly every one of them have had either subframe mount rust, rocker rust, wheelwell rust, front strut tower rust or rust under the back seat...... or a combination of all of them. The worst was a 98 SSEi that had nearly no metal holding the rear subframe mounts in. I pointed it out and the guy said "Don't worry about it, it's not structural". Uhh... yeah it is.
Luckily, my sister's Olds 88 doesn't have too much rust... just a little on the dog legs and a bit on the rocker seams.
I've looked at a combination of 6 H-bodies (4 Bonnes and 2 88s) over the past few months, and nearly every one of them have had either subframe mount rust, rocker rust, wheelwell rust, front strut tower rust or rust under the back seat...... or a combination of all of them. The worst was a 98 SSEi that had nearly no metal holding the rear subframe mounts in. I pointed it out and the guy said "Don't worry about it, it's not structural". Uhh... yeah it is.
Luckily, my sister's Olds 88 doesn't have too much rust... just a little on the dog legs and a bit on the rocker seams.
2012 Grand Cherokee Overland Summit - Hemi
1996 Thunderbird LX - 3.8
1996 Thunderbird LX - 3.8
- MattStrike
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'92 Trofeo - Location: SE Michigan
Re: May be time to part company
It's sad, to see these cars going. All it takes is regular car (under-body) washes as part of your winter maintenance to prevent a significant amount of this rust. And stop the rust as soon as it starts.
Hopefully my rust restoration thread has encouraged you to fix the car up
Hopefully my rust restoration thread has encouraged you to fix the car up
Boost addict

The Fleet:
'93 SSEi - Twincharged + manual Build thread
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'05 STS - V8, AWD, her DD
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'04 Sierra 2500HD - LLY Duramax
Current project:
Something cool, trust me.
Upcoming projects:
'92 Bonneville SSE
'87 LeSabre T-type
'67 LeSabre
Gone to greener pastures:
'84 Sierra Classic - Twin turbo 3800
'97 LeSabre - Top swap
RIP:
'86 LeSabre - pictures
'93 SE - L67

The Fleet:
'93 SSEi - Twincharged + manual Build thread
'97 Camaro - Top swap
'05 STS - V8, AWD, her DD
'92 Trofeo - Fair weather DD
'99 Montana - top swap 3800
'04 Sierra 2500HD - LLY Duramax
Current project:
Something cool, trust me.
Upcoming projects:
'92 Bonneville SSE
'87 LeSabre T-type
'67 LeSabre
Gone to greener pastures:
'84 Sierra Classic - Twin turbo 3800
'97 LeSabre - Top swap
RIP:
'86 LeSabre - pictures
'93 SE - L67
- harofreak00
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Re: May be time to part company
In cars that old, the pinch weld seams aren't strong enough to hold the car up, you would have had better luck moving it further under the car and on the framerail.
Andrew - owner/operator of Bonnevilles Unlimited

2004 Bonneville GXP | 60k | White Gold Tricoat | custom built supercharged 3800 hot rod | garage queen
1997 Corvette | 57k | Silver Metallic | Z06 wheels | Date-night Hauler/Parts runner
2014 Town & Country Limited | Cashmere Pearl | 115k | Family Hauler
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2004 Bonneville GXP | 60k | White Gold Tricoat | custom built supercharged 3800 hot rod | garage queen
1997 Corvette | 57k | Silver Metallic | Z06 wheels | Date-night Hauler/Parts runner
2014 Town & Country Limited | Cashmere Pearl | 115k | Family Hauler
2002 Ram 1500 Quad Cab Sport | Black| 280k | Official Bonneville Hauler
- reb
- Posts like an LG3

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- Year and Trim: 1997 Bonneville SE 40th Ann Edition
Original Owner - Location: Wantagh, NY
Re: May be time to part company
My subframe bushings were bad when I last jacked my car up in the driveway. Immediately after setting the car down my steering rack started binding requiring replacement. Since then I've been bringing my car to my mechanic to raise by the lift. I try and avoid using the floor jack now do to the age of the car.
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Bonneville92V688
- Certified Bonneville Nut

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- Location: NE Ohio Original join date - March 2006
Re: May be time to part company
Here's a good rust example -
http://cleveland.craigslist.org/cto/3234411607.html
"engine is braced with chains"
http://cleveland.craigslist.org/cto/3234411607.html
"engine is braced with chains"
2012 Grand Cherokee Overland Summit - Hemi
1996 Thunderbird LX - 3.8
1996 Thunderbird LX - 3.8
- RJolly87
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Re: May be time to part company
Just means you need to come to the southwest to get another one. Rust is unheard of over here
~Randall~


1993 Buick Park Avenue - 197k - Some odds and ends done - Simply won't die
1994 Buick Regal - 78k - Bone stock - Always ready for a good kicking
1990 Oldsmobile 88 - Gone to a better place


1993 Buick Park Avenue - 197k - Some odds and ends done - Simply won't die
1994 Buick Regal - 78k - Bone stock - Always ready for a good kicking
1990 Oldsmobile 88 - Gone to a better place
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94SilverSSEi
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68 w/400
94 SSEi - Location: Racine, Wisconsin
Re: May be time to part company
RJolly87 wrote:Just means you need to come to the southwest to get another one. Rust is unheard of over here
^^^^
THIS!
I have family in FLorida might have to pick one up next time we go down there.....
Don't the car get's are sunbaked in the hotter places that don't have salt?
We know someone from ARizona and he was saying it gets so hot it burns the paint right off some of the cars. Cracks the dashboards, etc.
Clay
1997.2 40th SLE-138k
1968 Bonneville 400ci w/TH-400-40k
1999 GMC Suburban SLT-191k
2005 Escalade 253k-GINA
1997.2 40th SLE-138k
1968 Bonneville 400ci w/TH-400-40k
1999 GMC Suburban SLT-191k
2005 Escalade 253k-GINA
nos4blood70 wrote:Literally, cars are drugs.
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Mad Myche
- GXP Member

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- Year and Trim: 1999 Bonneville SE
- Location: Around Milwaukee
Re: May be time to part company
Assessed the situation finally last night and this morning... It neither sliced the fuel line nor went completely through the floor. Subframe seemed to be solid enough.
What caused the fuel spill was a tug on the main line and it is actually occurring at the rotting-out hard line from the tank, and it crumbled within the connector. I am working on trying to find a floor jack as there is no way in hell I am going to work near the tank with only a scissors jack.
So I'll bandage it up as best I can to keep it on the road. Haven't decided if I want to junk it yet. I don't know if I could pass it off on craigslist or not
What caused the fuel spill was a tug on the main line and it is actually occurring at the rotting-out hard line from the tank, and it crumbled within the connector. I am working on trying to find a floor jack as there is no way in hell I am going to work near the tank with only a scissors jack.
So I'll bandage it up as best I can to keep it on the road. Haven't decided if I want to junk it yet. I don't know if I could pass it off on craigslist or not
~Mad Myche from Around Milwaukee~ wrote:Contrary to what some may think... I have not lost touch with reality, rather; reality cannot keep up with me
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LeSabre in Buffalo
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Re: May be time to part company
Ouch! I went through the same thing with my LeSabre. Between that issue, my earlier rust repair starting to rust out, and an expanding commute, it was time to part ways.
Harbor Freight often has low-profile 2-ton jacks on sale. If you're dreaming of getting a newer car someday, go with the steel ones, since they're heavier duty while still being manageable by 1 person. I have the earlier version of this jack, and it's been a pleasure to use: http://www.harborfreight.com/automotive ... 68049.html
Harbor Freight often has low-profile 2-ton jacks on sale. If you're dreaming of getting a newer car someday, go with the steel ones, since they're heavier duty while still being manageable by 1 person. I have the earlier version of this jack, and it's been a pleasure to use: http://www.harborfreight.com/automotive ... 68049.html
- reb
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Original Owner - Location: Wantagh, NY
Re: May be time to part company
Are you referring to the flexible high pressure line from the fuel filter to the fuel tank sending unit? If so, that line is replaceable and ofter available at a local dealer. If the high pressure outlet end on the fuel sending unit is indeed crumbled/corroded then you need to replace the sending unit. There really is no safe way to "bandage up" fuel lines. This has to be done correctly.Mad Myche wrote:Assessed the situation finally last night and this morning... It neither sliced the fuel line nor went completely through the floor. Subframe seemed to be solid enough.
What caused the fuel spill was a tug on the main line and it is actually occurring at the rotting-out hard line from the tank, and it crumbled within the connector. I am working on trying to find a floor jack as there is no way in hell I am going to work near the tank with only a scissors jack.
So I'll bandage it up as best I can to keep it on the road. Haven't decided if I want to junk it yet. I don't know if I could pass it off on craigslist or not
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Mad Myche
- GXP Member

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- Year and Trim: 1999 Bonneville SE
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Re: May be time to part company
Yes, it is the outlet line from the pump. I have not fully investigated the extent of corrosion; but it does not appear to be over the entire length. I am well aware that HP fuel lines are not simple rubber tubing replacements, and I would be checking to see what the integrity of the lines were before I replaced the afflicted section. If it is just the end that got broken off due to being ripped out and the rest of the tubing was fine I would not hesitate to put in a replacement hard line for the broken off piecereb wrote:Are you referring to the flexible high pressure line from the fuel filter to the fuel tank sending unit? If so, that line is replaceable and ofter available at a local dealer. If the high pressure outlet end on the fuel sending unit is indeed crumbled/corroded then you need to replace the sending unit. There really is no safe way to "bandage up" fuel lines. This has to be done correctly.
~Mad Myche from Around Milwaukee~ wrote:Contrary to what some may think... I have not lost touch with reality, rather; reality cannot keep up with me
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1oldman
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Re: May be time to part company
only if you live where the use of salt on the roads is liberal. The "ole green machine" (aka ole green monster) has little to no rust. - BCBonneville92V688 wrote:Sadly, this is where all of these cars are headed.
In Memory of Brad - 1/21/1977 .. 10/23/2013 ...... Aaron - 1977 .. 2017 .....
2017 Hyundai Santa Fe Sport ..... 1992 Bonneville SSE 1SB 170 HP L27 4T60E retired/sold to MattStrike ..... 2005 Bonneville SE 1SC 205 HP L36 4T65E - retired/salvage yard ..... PBCF user 2321
2017 Hyundai Santa Fe Sport ..... 1992 Bonneville SSE 1SB 170 HP L27 4T60E retired/sold to MattStrike ..... 2005 Bonneville SE 1SC 205 HP L36 4T65E - retired/salvage yard ..... PBCF user 2321
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Maymybonneliveforevr
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Re: May be time to part company
I wasn't aware of this, thanks for the information. What about the return line since I believe I've got a leak generating there and was thinking of a neoprene repair.Mad Myche wrote:Yes, it is the outlet line from the pump.I am well aware that HP fuel lines are not simple rubber tubing replacements, and I would be checking to see what the integrity of the lines were before I replaced the afflicted section.
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Mad Myche
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Re: May be time to part company
There was enough line coming from the sending unit to work with, and a co-volunteer at the fire department had some slick ass flaring tool that he was able to get in there with. I was able to source some 3/8" Injection rated hose (150psi working / 500 psi max) and purchased 3 feet. I needed less than 2. I double-clamped both ends (with fuel injection hose clamps) and took it to the gas station. Smelled a little gas, but no pool forming
Took it home. Found a pool forming. My lines were good though; I simultaneously had knicked the return line. I broke out the tubing cutter at chopped at the now obvious point of failure. Deburred and cleaned up the line, slid 8" of my remaining HP line onto the return line and again double clamped. No problems found.
Is is what I wanted to do? No, but I have neither the time nor money to replace the fuel pump assembly and the line that goes from it to the fuel filter at this time. If I decide that I am going to keep the car then I will budget the pump and line assembly in for a month or so down the road. The return line I will leave. I am confident in the integrity of both lines.
Took it home. Found a pool forming. My lines were good though; I simultaneously had knicked the return line. I broke out the tubing cutter at chopped at the now obvious point of failure. Deburred and cleaned up the line, slid 8" of my remaining HP line onto the return line and again double clamped. No problems found.
Is is what I wanted to do? No, but I have neither the time nor money to replace the fuel pump assembly and the line that goes from it to the fuel filter at this time. If I decide that I am going to keep the car then I will budget the pump and line assembly in for a month or so down the road. The return line I will leave. I am confident in the integrity of both lines.
~Mad Myche from Around Milwaukee~ wrote:Contrary to what some may think... I have not lost touch with reality, rather; reality cannot keep up with me
- reb
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Re: May be time to part company
I'm impressed with the effort and quality of repair you described. You saved yourself quite a bit of money and labor. Those oem hoses are expensive and the tank has to be dropped to change the fuel pump/sending unit.
Good job bro!
Good job bro!


