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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

First proper job...


cheekymonkey
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Just fitted my new fuel pump today. First proper job on the supe - had been enjoying driving it but today thought I'd start doing all the little jobs I am saving up.

 

Took me a couple of hours all in - the WORST part was getting the damn fuel line banjo bolt off without the whole assembly rotating around. In the end I had to hold the "body" of the banjo bolt with mole grips and twist in opposing directions. Nightmare it was.

 

Anyway it's done now - car runs fine so I might have some something right. Can still smell fuel in the interior of the car, but there was quite a bit of spray so hoping that's all going to evaporate off overnight.

 

next weekend - spark plugs! :D

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Good work :) The fuel pump swap was where my home mechanics started too, before then, the only thing I could do was change a stereo :innocent:

 

Spark plugs will be a pain first time, if the hoses between the two cam covers are in any way brittle order replacements from Toyota before starting the job! It took me 2 hours to do it first time, but managed it in 8 minutes last week (about the 20th time I've done it :D )

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Dude, it may be wise ordering some coil pack connectors and getting them changed while your at it, very easy to do.

 

Chance's are that a few may be shagged.

 

Do you have a part number for these at mate, and would you recommend getting all 6 changed?

Cheers!

James

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Spark plugs will be a pain first time, if the hoses between the two cam covers are in any way brittle order replacements from Toyota before starting the job! It took me 2 hours to do it first time, but managed it in 8 minutes last week (about the 20th time I've done it :D )

 

Yeah I will get those ordered I think. I should be OK with that job, but will take my time to enjoy it.

 

After that it's FCD time, as my autosport wiring harness arrived a few days ago.

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May wait and see what condition they are in in the first place, as I am in the lucky position of not having to depend on the car.

 

In that case, you might save £36. Not sure if you know already, but its the white insulators inside the connectors that tend to go brittle over time and can fall apart very easily. Just try bending them very slightly, if they crack it's time to replace.

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