As mentioned in another subforum, I recently bought an '86 CRX Si in what appears to be pretty good shape, with the intention to use it as a part-time DD. My commute is about 60 miles round trip and the BMWs fuel consumption was eating a little deeper into my toy budget than I liked.
So, when I first got it it looked rather good:
Even has the original dealer's sticker still on the back:
A couple of days commuting in it resulted in a couple of not-so-nice discoveries, though. The shocks were on the rather worn side, second gear was crunchier than corn flakes when the gearbox had warmed up and the front was listing to the driver's side. Plus, when driving it seemed that the hood was flapping or pushed up. Odd, that.
Well, the hood seemed to have been pushed up by the driver's side shock absorber that had about 1/4" play in the top mount so I ordered new shocks and mounts - got the last set of KYB GR-2s Tire Rack had in stock after the guys over at Red Pepper Racing suggested that these work well on a DD and parked the car until yesterday.
Time to get at the rear upper shock mounts, which look almost as clean as the day they left the factory:
I'm still paranoid about rust on this car but so far I've only found some rust in the lower corners of the windshield that needs addressing. So, I pulled out the upper spring mount and had a peek inside:
Nothing. Pretty much all the underside of the car that is visible looks as clean as above and this photo of the wheelarch:
Anyway, rear shocks pulled out, they seem to have been most of the new "damper oil applied outside the shock" variety:
The rear springs are in such a shaped that I could still see the original paint marks from the factory once I wiped down the dust:
The driver's side shock basically had all its oil stuck to the outside:
By the time I was done with the job and had cleaned up two hours later, only one of the four shocks that came off the car had extended itself in any meaningful fashion. The other ones were as compressed as they had been when I took them off. I guess they were a little overdue for replacement.
While I had the car up on axle stands, I drained the gearbox oil as I had suspected that someone stuck the wrong oil in - these take engine oil in the gearbox, not gearbox oil. The oil that came out had a faint whiff of gearbox oil and it also wasn't quite enough oil in there so I stuck some of Napa's finest liquified dino 10W40 in there. The shifter certainly felt better when I backed it out of the garage last night but I'll only find out this morning if it really makes a difference when the engine is hot.
Unfortunately I also noticed that the waterpump is leaking, plus the PO couldn't get the fuel filter off so I have to try and get my favourite mechanics up here to address those issues. As my wife already pointed out, I have two months and a ton of work remaining on the Miata so I really should spend more time on that car.