> A friend is offering to sell me his old car-cheap. It runs OK, but it's
> quite noisy. He said the guy he took it to quoted him $1200 to fix the
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> PB
>> A friend is offering to sell me his old car-cheap. It runs OK, but
>> it's quite noisy. He said the guy he took it to quoted him $1200 to
>> fix the exhaust system. He got another car instead.
Sincere thanks to both people who replied.
The person selling me the Nissan hit a deer with his Hyundai, rendering
the hood un-openable. When the "Check Engine" light came on and stayed
on, he brought it to me for an emergency hoodectomy (successful). The
result of all this is that the Nissan is now safely ensconced in my
driveway. I will put it up on ramps this weekend and see what the problem is
Two issues:
One, what might this car need besides the obvious (plugs, wires, belts,
filters and a THOROUGH cleaning inside and out). Car has been neglected,
although the AC has been repaired and new batt/alt last fall. I've never
had a Nissan before and I don't know their quirks <g>.
Two, the driver's door sags, I mean it drops down when you open it. Now,
I can live with that, I've lived with worse. Still, nothing says
"Junker" like a door sagging every single time you get in or out. How
hard might this be to fix? I presume the hinge pin or hinge is worn from
no lubrication, and that fixing it would mean removing the door and
replacing the hinge assembly, or the entire door. Any tips or tricks
that would help me with this?
I have a fairly extensive set of tools, breaker bars, compressor and
air tools, hand impact driver etc.
PB
codifus - 28 Jun 2007 13:54 GMT
> >> A friend is offering to sell me his old car-cheap. It runs OK, but
> >> it's quite noisy. He said the guy he took it to quoted him $1200 to
[quoted text clipped - 26 lines]
>
> PB
The general quirks I know about nissans is that most of them have
timing chain motors. If their oil change regimen is neglected, you
tend to see problems like the timing chain idler pulley start to make
noise. The symptom is your car sounding like a diesel when it's
idling. Get that taken care of as soon as you can because if you
don't, the timing chain will fail....new motor.
Also, distributors. Some of the Nissan (Sentras, Altimas) motors have
their distributor driven by the exhaust cam. If your distributor is
mounted on one side of the cam cover, then that's the type I'm
referring to. These distributors are actually 2 things in one, a
normal distrobutor and a cam position sensor. Not a bug or a bad
thing, but after about 150,000 miles, the oil seal within the
distributor fails. Oil leaks into the electronics of the cam sensor
and your car has trouble starting and staying running. Solution:
replace the entire distributor.
Oil seals. The main oil seal under the belts on the crankshaft tend to
go on Sentras. You'll know when you see oil all over the place by the
belts, alternator etc. I'm on my second sentra and it has that leak as
well. I've never done the job. Had the mechanic take care of it for
about $250. I'm told that all you have to do is remove the belts, get
under the car and replace the seal from there.
Despite these quitrks which are mainly due to old age of the vehicle
and abuse/neglect, Nissan makes some great motors.
CD