Patent stuff??? I hope you aren't going to send storm troopers to confiscate the jig that is in my toolbox
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For those Rammers who need to fix the dowel pin now, so they can sleep better, my jig has a hole in it just big enough for the 5/16 x 18 tap and a sleeve from copper or steel tubing to bush it down to 1/4" for the through drill. The jig bolts down to the aluminum gear housing or the front cover using the two bolts around the dowel pin. These bolts go through the housing into the engine block. The drill goes into the housing at about a 23 degree angle inward from the stamped steel cover surface, and strikes the outside of the aluminum gear housing about 1. 5 cm inboard from the steel cover (the housing is about 3. 5 cm thick)--that is, almost half way along its thickness. This puts the end of a button head bolt or socket head set screw just over/on the dowel pin. I seal and retain the setscrew with red Loctite 271 or equiv. Because of the continued interest in the dowel pin, I have taken pictures and roughed out a write-up for the TDR Tech Topics column for Issue 33 (32 is in press already).
Also, not wishing to worry everyone too much, but in the interest of complete information, there are bolts inside the cover that also could come loose (I have heard of only one such case). Cleaning them and the threaded holes, then using blue Loctite 242 or equiv. might be in order if you take the stamped steel cover off.
If you are very careful to sweep and/or vacuum chips, and use grease on the tap to collect chips, you can probably do the setscrew routine and not get any (or maybe 1-2) little chips into the gear housing if you don't take off the cover. I think a tiny bit of aluminum is better than that darn dowel pin banging around in there, but the ideal situation is to have neither loose inside, of course. The inside of an engine isn't a very friendly environment anyway. For example, Holset tests their turbos by pouring junk through the exhaust side (just in case the factory leaves something in a port, they don't want the turbo to grenade).
[This message has been edited by Joseph Donnelly (edited 04-27-2001). ]