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I bought and assembled a stove - Toyota Mark II, 2.5 liter, 1993

After the accident, the stove and panel (torpedo) were badly damaged :(
I was looking for a normal stove for a 90 body for a long time, but I still couldn’t find the whole ones, or more than 6 tr were broken for them.

And then a friend calls me, says that somewhere in the analysis there is a stove for 90 body for 3 tr.

We went to that review. They asked for a stove ... they brought us something even more broken than mine. I was upset, but then I look they carry something similar. It turned out they were carrying another stove, but from the 100th body.
Put them side by side, I began to compare, eventually found a couple of minor differences that I can fix by dismantling the remains of my stove and the "new" one and assembling one of them. I'm taking this stove from the JZX-100, taking it to the garage and taking it apart.

     Toyota Mark II 25 1993

The stove turned out to be pretty clean and strong in appearance compared to the native stove from my brand. After all, the 100 body is fresh, and the plastic has apparently not yet had time to turn into a cookie that breaks as soon as you touch it.
But the shutters were in less good condition. They are pasted over with foam, which fell like sand when you touch it :(

     Toyota Mark II 25 1993

Decided to remove it

     Toyota Mark II 25 1993

Then, having cleaned the already clean stove inside to a shine, gluing all the dampers (of which there seem to be 8) with a new foam (the material "bitoplast" is available in any car audio store) and simultaneously gluing all the connections with it, I started assembling a NEW stove

     Toyota Mark II 25 1993     Toyota Mark II 25 1993     Toyota Mark II 25 1993

Then I installed all the servos, temperature sensors, a braid and a stove control unit

     Toyota Mark II 25 1993

Here, she is a beauty already in her rightful place :) though after some modifications to the mounts, but quite insignificant

     Toyota Mark II 25 1993

P.S.
The radiator remaining from the native stove 90 of the body did not fit into the stove, I had to buy a radiator from the stove of the 100th body, because. he was not in the oven from parsing. For him, I laid out another 2300 rubles, but he is also contracted and therefore not shitty, etc. The Japanese do not pour any diarrhea into the cooling system.

Issue price: 5 500 ₽
214 Comments
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s
self made 26.01.22

It turned out great, a real custom))

S
SERP308 26.01.22

Pleased me, otherwise I already imagined how I tear it off and re-glue it ((((I almost got sick ...

R
RPoison 26.01.22

No, it didn't smell.

S
SERP308 26.01.22

Is there a smell of bitumen? I glued the two dampers that are in contact with the radiator with a biplast, and the rest with a bitoplast, and only now I found out their difference ((((

R
RPoison 26.01.22

There was no more reason to climb there, everything is ok

S
SERP308 26.01.22

RPoison

Let's check...

How did the bitoplast behave? And then I also glued everything to them, now I think to leave it or re-glue it with a biplast until I put it

H
HEXOPOLLIuu 26.01.22

And How ? checked?))))))

i
ilya131 26.01.22

of course, disassembling the oven now is most likely not realistic, but in general there is now a new version of the bitoplast that is impregnated with silicone, I don’t remember what it’s called, but the essence is the same

R
RPoison 26.01.22

Let's check...

Z
ZIGGER 26.01.22

Damn, everything is great, but once when I was heated by the sun, an impregnation flowed from the bioplastic right in the wheelbarrow, which did not want to be washed off the plastic at all, maybe it’s worth doing a series of tests so that there are no incidents later?