A tale of two transaxles..
Posted: Tue Jun 07, 2005 7:26 pm
Or how my GTV6 got home: (Dubbed the Africannonball by some friends!
The tale of two transaxles starts on Thursday 19 May. I am driving down to Miami with a friend (Tony) in his '85 944. Tony's comments are marked in italics unless otherwise noted. We plan to go our seperate ways down there and drive back together. Tony arrives at my house at 7:20am. We pack (my toolbag alone weighs a ton!) the 944 and take some pictures. We leave my house at around 7:40am.

...strangely enough, Neil's 150 lbs. of equipment is not the heaviest load the 944 has carried. . .. being parked on a slope and having the rear suspension lowered adds to the "Beverly Hillbillies" look... -TK
Tony takes the first leg and drives to our first stop just south of the Ohio border. I am impressed by the passenger seat in the 944. Boy, this is comfortable!
Tony and the 944 at the rest area in WV:
I take over driving and we do a quick systems check on the 944:

Not long after this the driver side mirror (glass only) decides it wants to stay in West Virginny and departs company with the car. Hmm, we will have to stop somewhere to attend to this. Luckily Tony remembers an exit with an Advance Auto and some food places (even we have to eat sometime!). Of course, we do not expect the Advance to have a replacement mirror but we are confident that they wil have something we can use. We find a plastic(?) emercency replacement mirror that needs to be trimmed to size. We also borrow a pair of "Powercutter" scissors from the for sale bin in front of their parts counter. Mirror install pics follows:



We need to do an infomercial on this great product!. . . . The town is Kanawah (sp?) City, WV. For those of you who have traveled the WV turnpike, this is the little town in the valley below the big green bridge just south of Charleston and just before you get into the turnpike's wonderful twisties. -TK
And the finished product with the proud installer:

Thank you Advance! BTW, we did return the "Powercutter"!

We get some sustenance and get back on the road. We follow this for a while:

I am enjoying the drive in the 944. Tony informs me that the car needs some minor maintenance in the front suspension and is actually a little sloppy at the front. Wow! I wonder what it feels like when everything 100%. We find the new "mirror" to have a funhouse mirror effect. But, hey at least we can see behind us now! We stop for gas after crossing into North Carolina. Premium costs $2.40 a gallon. The trip is fairly uneventful but we do hit some rain in the Charlotte region. Actually the first rainstorm is more like hitting a wall of water! The fast speed on the wipers on the 944 is good! We see 2 crashes on the north side of I77 in less than a mile. About 10 miles later we see another big crash on the north side. The new tires on the 944 work like a dream with virtually no aquaplaning. Somewhere in this section we pass a Dodge Superbee (I think) travelling north pulling a Geo Storm on a tow dolly!
Finally we hit the peach state. We think the governor's name is appropriate: Sonny Purdue. He just needs to open a chain of BBQ shops!

We stop at a Subway in Savannah for some more fuel for our bodies. I will let Tony speak more about this but at least we did not get threatened! (This references an altercation a friend had towards the end of this year's One Lap of America at a Subway towards the end of the trip)
Hoping for our own street-tough Subway adventure, we head into a mean-lookin' sub shop off the freeway. We encounter an interesting character in Subway, but by no means a challenge of mortal combat: Our server seemed to be a 16-17 yr. old male, however he was wearing nail polish, and his blond hair was tied up behind his head and poking out of his baseball cap much the way you would expect from a girl of that age. To complete the ensemble, he had his ears scalpeled-out to the point that all that was left of the lobes was a thin band of flesh holding what appeared to be a bearing outer-race (about 3/4" outer diameter). !
. .. . . . .indeed, things must be very different when he is "not wearing this Subway uniform"!
We finally get to Florida!


Ever in the hurry to get there, we busted out the tripod in the rest area parking lot and experimented a bit with f-stop and exposure time on Neil's camera. Very "miami vice", no? .... State troopers on guard must have thought we were a bunch of freaks. . . - TK
We fill up in St. Augustine Florida for the final leg down to Ft. Lauderdale. I am still feeling fresh and am now really impressed by the seats in the 944. It does not even feel like I drove all the way from WV! A quick fluid check shows the oil is still nice and clean after 1500 miles.
...as always...
Tony takes over driving duties again. We hit a bad road (bridge) transition really hard somewhere south of Daytona Beach and pick up a vibration from the rear of the car. We stop to check things out but see no damage. The vibration also disapperears. The rest of the drive is fairly typical of Florida. Straight, flat and a good portion of law enforcement around. We check into the hotel at 3:30 am check the board and catch some sleep.
For the second time on this trip and the second time ever since I owned this particular car, the suspension bottomed out/hit the stops, and very hard. I was fearing the worst, but we could find no damage. Only thing is a quick run up to about 100mph brought a faint wheel bearing noise that was never there before. Will have to do further "testing" to diagnose this potential problem for sure. No big deal, though - car will turn 150k miles on its way home to Ohio - perhaps new wheel bearings are deserved at this point anyway! - TK
The tale of two transaxles starts on Thursday 19 May. I am driving down to Miami with a friend (Tony) in his '85 944. Tony's comments are marked in italics unless otherwise noted. We plan to go our seperate ways down there and drive back together. Tony arrives at my house at 7:20am. We pack (my toolbag alone weighs a ton!) the 944 and take some pictures. We leave my house at around 7:40am.

...strangely enough, Neil's 150 lbs. of equipment is not the heaviest load the 944 has carried. . .. being parked on a slope and having the rear suspension lowered adds to the "Beverly Hillbillies" look... -TK
Tony takes the first leg and drives to our first stop just south of the Ohio border. I am impressed by the passenger seat in the 944. Boy, this is comfortable!
Tony and the 944 at the rest area in WV:
I take over driving and we do a quick systems check on the 944:

Not long after this the driver side mirror (glass only) decides it wants to stay in West Virginny and departs company with the car. Hmm, we will have to stop somewhere to attend to this. Luckily Tony remembers an exit with an Advance Auto and some food places (even we have to eat sometime!). Of course, we do not expect the Advance to have a replacement mirror but we are confident that they wil have something we can use. We find a plastic(?) emercency replacement mirror that needs to be trimmed to size. We also borrow a pair of "Powercutter" scissors from the for sale bin in front of their parts counter. Mirror install pics follows:



We need to do an infomercial on this great product!. . . . The town is Kanawah (sp?) City, WV. For those of you who have traveled the WV turnpike, this is the little town in the valley below the big green bridge just south of Charleston and just before you get into the turnpike's wonderful twisties. -TK
And the finished product with the proud installer:

Thank you Advance! BTW, we did return the "Powercutter"!

We get some sustenance and get back on the road. We follow this for a while:

I am enjoying the drive in the 944. Tony informs me that the car needs some minor maintenance in the front suspension and is actually a little sloppy at the front. Wow! I wonder what it feels like when everything 100%. We find the new "mirror" to have a funhouse mirror effect. But, hey at least we can see behind us now! We stop for gas after crossing into North Carolina. Premium costs $2.40 a gallon. The trip is fairly uneventful but we do hit some rain in the Charlotte region. Actually the first rainstorm is more like hitting a wall of water! The fast speed on the wipers on the 944 is good! We see 2 crashes on the north side of I77 in less than a mile. About 10 miles later we see another big crash on the north side. The new tires on the 944 work like a dream with virtually no aquaplaning. Somewhere in this section we pass a Dodge Superbee (I think) travelling north pulling a Geo Storm on a tow dolly!
Finally we hit the peach state. We think the governor's name is appropriate: Sonny Purdue. He just needs to open a chain of BBQ shops!

We stop at a Subway in Savannah for some more fuel for our bodies. I will let Tony speak more about this but at least we did not get threatened! (This references an altercation a friend had towards the end of this year's One Lap of America at a Subway towards the end of the trip)
Hoping for our own street-tough Subway adventure, we head into a mean-lookin' sub shop off the freeway. We encounter an interesting character in Subway, but by no means a challenge of mortal combat: Our server seemed to be a 16-17 yr. old male, however he was wearing nail polish, and his blond hair was tied up behind his head and poking out of his baseball cap much the way you would expect from a girl of that age. To complete the ensemble, he had his ears scalpeled-out to the point that all that was left of the lobes was a thin band of flesh holding what appeared to be a bearing outer-race (about 3/4" outer diameter). !
We finally get to Florida!


Ever in the hurry to get there, we busted out the tripod in the rest area parking lot and experimented a bit with f-stop and exposure time on Neil's camera. Very "miami vice", no? .... State troopers on guard must have thought we were a bunch of freaks. . . - TK
We fill up in St. Augustine Florida for the final leg down to Ft. Lauderdale. I am still feeling fresh and am now really impressed by the seats in the 944. It does not even feel like I drove all the way from WV! A quick fluid check shows the oil is still nice and clean after 1500 miles.
...as always...
Tony takes over driving duties again. We hit a bad road (bridge) transition really hard somewhere south of Daytona Beach and pick up a vibration from the rear of the car. We stop to check things out but see no damage. The vibration also disapperears. The rest of the drive is fairly typical of Florida. Straight, flat and a good portion of law enforcement around. We check into the hotel at 3:30 am check the board and catch some sleep.
For the second time on this trip and the second time ever since I owned this particular car, the suspension bottomed out/hit the stops, and very hard. I was fearing the worst, but we could find no damage. Only thing is a quick run up to about 100mph brought a faint wheel bearing noise that was never there before. Will have to do further "testing" to diagnose this potential problem for sure. No big deal, though - car will turn 150k miles on its way home to Ohio - perhaps new wheel bearings are deserved at this point anyway! - TK



















