2001 - 2005 Honda Civic Combination Exhaust Manifold Catalytic Converter Replacement

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  • čas přidán 20. 02. 2019
  • This video demonstrates how to replace the combination catalytic converter exhaust manfold on your 2001-2005 Honda Civic equipped with the 1.7 liter engine. My manifold always had exhaust leaks that you could smell and hear and despite repeated repairs and re-welding of the manifold that the previous fixes were unsucessfull. I decided to replace the entire assembly. Total time to complete the job was approximately 1 hour.
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Komentáře • 280

  • @GregGreggyGregGreg
    @GregGreggyGregGreg Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you SO SO SO much for this video! I am not good with cars, so any repair that I must do on my car, I always look it up on CZcams. Your video is the ONLY ONE on CZcams that I've found that details this whole process for this model.

  • @Sir_R
    @Sir_R Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thank you. My catalytic converter/exhaust manifold has a MASSIVE crack in it and I didn’t notice until I flashed LED lights on it.
    I’ve been having hard starts, idling rough, sputtering, loss of gas mileage, and this is definitely a the cause of it. Thank you so much. This is extremely helpful.

  • @recreate3204
    @recreate3204 Před 3 lety +16

    Glad to see it's a fairly easy job. Reviving my 05 Civic that's been sitting on the lawn for the past 4 years. It's had a crack in the manifold forever now, it's about time I fix it before I sell it. Thanks for the video!

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +3

      Yes thankfully its a super easy job. Good luck on your fix. Liquid wrench is your friend!

  • @MrOTcomputer
    @MrOTcomputer Před 4 lety +7

    I didn't get the chance to say this before but *thank you for making this awesome VIDEO!* This helped me big time! Excellent directions and explanations. Thank you so much. I really appreciated your assistance and help. 👍👍

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      You’re most welcome. Thanks for watching. Share this vid with your friends and consider subscribing!

  • @thill9k
    @thill9k Před 4 lety +5

    Hey man, thanks for the great vid. Now I feel like I need to go out and do some good today. Right after I crush my manifold job. Thank you and be well.

  • @jehu5279
    @jehu5279 Před 5 lety +20

    Good content, I'm about to tackle the same job in a bit for a customer, thanks.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety

      you're most welcome. Hope it all works out for you.

  • @thetechloop65
    @thetechloop65 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Currently wanting to bash my head in because the last nut I need to take off the catalytic converter/exhaust manifold is rounded off, been at this for 3 days. Other than that, video itself has been super helpful!

    • @No_UU
      @No_UU Před 17 dny

      Glad im not the only one. Wish it wasn’t us.

  • @waynesanchez6504
    @waynesanchez6504 Před 4 lety +3

    You're a great guy for making this video, for all of us who also must replace these parts. HOWEVER, I've been fighting with the plugs, on the pair of upstream O2 sensors, for DAYS now and CANNOT get them to come undone!!
    You make it all look too easy, did it all too quickly, and had your hands in the way, so we have NO IDEA what you ACTUALLY DID to remove and disconnect the sensors, from the wiring harness.

    • @jamesfair9751
      @jamesfair9751 Před 4 lety +1

      Did you ever get the plugs off ? There’s a plastic tab on the plug you just push in on and pull out on the plug.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +2

      Hi Wayne, my apologies for not replying sooner. I'm sure you've got this job done already but I thought I'd reply anyways. The problem with being a one man show when making these videos is being unable to get the best camera views to show how to take certain things apart. To get the connector to slide off the bracket you lift the tab up inside where the metal bracket go into the plug and give it a tug and it comes right off. No fighting or black magic of any sorts to get it off. To get the plug halves to come apart firmly press the release button and wiggle the two connector halves apart. Again a very straightforward process.

  • @CarAudioInc
    @CarAudioInc Před 5 lety +8

    It's too bad there aren't aftermarket companies that specialize in fixing engineering flaws in parts like this. (Like the aftermarket suspension and radio market does!) I'd pay a bit more over OEM to know the problem has been corrected. Great vid as always!

    • @Stegmutt
      @Stegmutt Před 5 lety +6

      Dorman sells a CARB-compliant cat (673-608) that includes a 5 year/50k mile warranty and costs less than OEM. Might be worth checking out.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety +4

      Thanks for sharing that. I considered the Dorman one as well BUT I've read lots of horror stories and heard of a lot of complaints about aftermarket cats not holding up to the same emission standards as the genuine cat. The Honda one is SO CHEAPLY made that they should be ashamed of themselves for making such a junky part that costs nearly $1000 to buy!

    • @russadams8528
      @russadams8528 Před rokem +1

      @@piercedasian Thanks for this video! I just checked with the Honda dealer here in Virginia and the combo is just under $1,300. So maybe the prices vary a lot depending on where you live. The dealer said it would take a week to get the part. This is Monday and I need the car running for a trip on Friday. The Dorman one is available much faster (and cheaper) than original Honda. Where did you see issues with the Dorman has problems?

  • @city8456
    @city8456 Před 5 lety +34

    the engine bay is really clean.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety +3

      Thanks! All my engines are always this clean. I can't stand working on dirty engines and cars.

  • @bboyisaac07
    @bboyisaac07 Před 2 lety +3

    Simple instructions but thorough as well. Thank you

  • @selamleethiopia4985
    @selamleethiopia4985 Před 3 lety +2

    Well done. You did a great job

  • @emortaltupac
    @emortaltupac Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you so much 🙏 you saved my life

  • @kr2513
    @kr2513 Před rokem +1

    Thank you so much for this I couldn't afford to pay the labor on this job and needed a little step by step instruction. I used a
    1A AUTO brand one made by cateran. Probably Chyna made. I will update this comment if the part didn't work out. Thanks again.

  • @waltwimer2551
    @waltwimer2551 Před 4 lety

    I'm working on the exhaust on my 2007 Honda Fit. My odyssey began with the center exhaust pipe cracking all the way through in a clean circle *just* downstream of the resonator. The nuts and bolts at the cat-to-center-pipe joint are unrecognizable as nuts and bolts (due to rust), so I decided to replace the cat. The Fit has a more traditional separate cat and exhaust manifold (and the engine is reversed from the '01-'05 Civic -- the exhaust manifold is against the firewall rather than against the radiator). Well, now I've sheared off one of the bolts between the cat and the exhaust manifold, and the other is likely to shear off as well. So I ordered a new (genuine Honda) exhaust manifold... I hope my manifold comes off as easily has yours on your Civic. I have a friend (who mostly works on Ford trucks and such rather than Hondas) who told me all kinds of exhaust manifold horror stories (mostly studs broken off flush with the cylinder head...). I'm crossing my fingers... (Once the old manifold is out of the car, I may eventually be able to salvage it by drilling out the sheared-off bolt(s) at the exit flange. But in the name of expediency, I decided to order a new manifold so that I can get the car back on the road more quickly...)
    Wish me luck! Thanks for your video!!!

    • @jamesfair9751
      @jamesfair9751 Před 4 lety +1

      This guy has had that manifold on and off several times and each time he oiled and used anti seize. Yours will not come off this easily I can pretty much guarantee that.

    • @waltwimer2551
      @waltwimer2551 Před 4 lety

      Well, removing the old exhaust manifold on my 2007 Fit wasn't trivial, but it actually went fairly well. A friend with American car experience (probably all with cast iron exhaust manifolds) told me it was an impossible job and that I might as well just set fire to the car and collect the insurance money! LOL! But the Fit (and most Hondas?) has a stainless steel exhaust manifold. So it went pretty well for me. Thank goodness! And I installed a brand new manifold to replace it (since one of the exit flange bolts sheared-off and I didn't want to spend a lot of time trying to remove it right now -- I needed to get the car back on the road ASAP).
      Rock 'n Roll!

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      Yikes, my response is super late but that sucks nuts (not pun intended). Rust is the bane of any mechanics existence but unfortunately we have to deal with it in whatever manner is necessary. The trick is using lots and lots and lots of penetrating lube over the course of several days. I've found that if I spray a good quality penetrating lube and give the part that needs to be dissembled a few good whacks with a hammer and then more penetrating lube that it makes things come apart a lot easier.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      Ah while you're comment on having the manifold on and off several times that the first time taking it off wasn't too bad. Similar to my comment above, I had used a tremendous amount of penetrating lube and "snap action" breaking of the nuts and bolts to get the parts free. Lower manifold bolts that were made of steel going into steel were removed again with a lot of lube and impact gun. Overall it wasn't too bad and during reassembly that I used lots of anti-seize to ensure future removals were much easier.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      Glad you got this all figured out. Honda manifolds I've found aren't too bad to remove (unless you live in the rust belt). Lots of lube and patience usually gets the job done right.

  • @josephamorales367
    @josephamorales367 Před 3 lety +1

    Great Video Thanks for your information, I'm ready to tackle it too.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety

      Hopefully you were able to get this fixed on your own!

  • @BeeEmEcks
    @BeeEmEcks Před 3 lety

    Excellent video well done

  • @andrewm.4168
    @andrewm.4168 Před 4 lety +1

    You make it look so simple getting the three nuts off the manifold. I noticed that access to the far right nut was impeded by the alternator. I tried to get a socket securely seated, but I couldn't quite get it, and rounded the nut when I tried to pop it. Now I have to pull the alternator to try and get access to remove the rounded nut. Total pain in the butt.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      It really is quite simple permitted you have the right tools and that the fasteners are well lubricated and not seized. The intent of my videos isn't to deceive the complexity of the job. I have basic tools to do the work and in the end it could be pure luck that my bolts came out as smoothly as they did. But yeah that far right nut is a bit of challenge - I don't deny that but it does come out with enough coaxing.

  • @angicahicks1424
    @angicahicks1424 Před 4 lety +3

    I was watching this video after already having bought my replacement Catalytic converter. I realized midway through that mine was relatively cheap. That being said, how do you feel about the Evan Fischer catalytic coverter/exhaust manifold combos? Is installing one going to cause me issues later on?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +3

      Cheap doesn't always translate to being bad. The problem with "inexpensive" cats is that they sometimes lack the build quality (not that the Honda one is "great") and more importantly is that they do not contain enough of the catalyst material (platinum and palladium) needed to properly lower emissions level to what the manufacturer designed it for. I've heard LOTS of great things about Walker cats but I don't have access to them here so rather than me hunting high and low for a substitute that I don't know will work properly that I opted to pay a lot more to get a Honda approved one. My pocket book suffered a lot but it's been many years and a lot of miles with ZERO emissions related problems. Only way to determine if yours is good is to either ask in a forum on the quality of yours, return it for a Honda one or just install it to try and see if you pass an emissions test.

  • @_i.m.dragon
    @_i.m.dragon Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for the nice video brother, I also have manifold cracked same as you showed, i would like to ask you if I replace manifold with a header is it a good idea?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      The problem with installing headers on this specific civic is where would you have a cat converter on the car? Headers are typically reserved for the cars where the cat is further downstream. In my particular civic's case the only logical option that I had while maintaining proper emissions controls is to use the factory cat.

  • @MrFelixthekat3759
    @MrFelixthekat3759 Před 4 lety

    outstanding job

  • @patrickhuskey8277
    @patrickhuskey8277 Před 4 lety +2

    Okay I'm gonna have my catalyst converter inspected tomorrow.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      Yeah sometimes inspections will catch them if they’re obvious but if they’re on the underside of the manifold then it is harder to catch.

  • @guardian8319
    @guardian8319 Před 3 lety

    Great Video dude

  • @alextorres5993
    @alextorres5993 Před 5 měsíci

    How do I get this exact wire harness for a M/T my wiring harness is missing the secondary o2 sensor wire

  • @sslinks5934
    @sslinks5934 Před 2 lety

    I need to change mine but I don’t know where to buy one from ? Any suggestions

  • @michaelbrown-cs1do
    @michaelbrown-cs1do Před 4 lety

    Great video thanks for the info!!!!!

  • @jamesgarcia5806
    @jamesgarcia5806 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you thank you thank you for this video

  • @ColoradoFlyFisherMan
    @ColoradoFlyFisherMan Před 5 lety +1

    Do you think you could have used a belt sander to flatten the manifold/flange straight and reweld the crack?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety +1

      no definitely not a good idea. IF I had more patience I may have taken the time to tightly bolt the manifold to a perfectly flat metal surface, heat the manifold up with a torch to fully open up the crack and then weld it up.

    • @JrSpitty
      @JrSpitty Před 4 lety +2

      @@piercedasian If i am not mistaken heat makes metal expand and seals the crack.... welding it in either the hot or cold state won't fix the problem because the metal has simply fatigued and can no longer expand or contract without breaking. Hence it cracked due to fatigue.

  • @JG-no4qr
    @JG-no4qr Před 2 lety

    Question- do you know if manifold catalytic converters are also being stolen during the pandemic? If not, can I install one on my car to increase protection?

  • @paultaylor2054
    @paultaylor2054 Před rokem

    you're a king thank you so much.

  • @pmexplore
    @pmexplore Před 3 lety

    To weld it would you take out the cat converter?
    Would a crack in the cat converter reduce power will climbing up hill?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      I have welded this manifold so many times in many different ways and it always seems to crack after several months of heat cycling. My time is worth more than the hassles of yanking the manifold out every few months to fix. Yes it did have more power and fuel economy putting in the new cat b/c it wan't leaking oxygen into the exhaust stream and throwing the o2 sensor readings off so the car drove better, was quiter and had marginally more power (if you consider 115HP much power at all). lol

  • @dannysautorepair
    @dannysautorepair Před 4 lety

    Great video

  • @astarrr54
    @astarrr54 Před 4 lety +1

    Hello, just found out today that my exhaust manifold has a crack in it. Now, where I live there are no emissions, I know that the leak will eventually get worse along with the gas mileage. But, my question is, can I buy the cheap converter?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      While you COULD buy a cheap converter that just remember that your emissions could be elevated (bad for environment if you care) and your car's performance may not be optimal as I believe the catalyst has to have a certain efficiency performance threshold such that the car's emission control systems can dial in the right ratio of fuel/air mixture to get best performance.

  • @zachf355
    @zachf355 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for making this video i replaced mine with an amazon cat for cad$130. Seems to be doing well. My 23yo civic with 400k kms is smoother than my co workers 2021 kia soul 😅😅😅😅

  • @straydog9287
    @straydog9287 Před 3 lety +1

    I had the same problem, decided to weld my manifold temporarily before i save enough to buy a new cat. My question is, my o2 sensors are both black on the ends, do I need to replace these as well or are they reusable? Thanks!

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      No need to replace the o2 sensors unless you're throwing a check engine code OR if the car has super high miles. O2 sensors are technically a maintenance item and DO wear out over time and wear out faster if your car has operational issues like burning oil or coolant (contamination of the exhaust stream). I am at 342,000 kms and I still run the original sensors with zero issue. Black buildup is normal assuming your car is in decent operating condition.

  • @cesartorres5356
    @cesartorres5356 Před 2 lety

    I see you're a man of culture. I also own a Crx Lol

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 2 lety +1

      I love the crx! She’s mostly a garage queen and She only sees road time under the most perfect condition.

  • @MrOTcomputer
    @MrOTcomputer Před 4 lety +1

    I've got a Honda Civic 2001 and if I understand this correctly, these all have the same issue with the manifold cracking in the exact same spot due to the manifold not being level and/or warping shortly after replacement. Meaning, your Exhaust manifold/catalytic converter is going to crack in the exact same spot again within 6 months to 1 year or so. Is this correct?
    I was thinking of using an exhaust wrap (Titanium Lava Fiber) and stainless steel wrap ties to avoid having to replace the same part again due to it cracking in the same spot eventually. What are your thoughts about that? My thinking is that if it cracks the crack will be somewhat sealed by the exhaust wrap and it will last a bit longer.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +2

      Mike your thinking does make sense and whether a new cat will crack or not is dependent on a few things such as if your head is warped or whether or not the new manifold was welded poorly (they all kinda are crappily made with overtly thin stamped steel). Here's the thing I've noticed when I put a new manifold on. Its been at least 50,000kms already and the new cat is holding up perfectly I suspect that by the time the 2nd cat cracks that the car's life would be close to the end anyways. I've been paying close attention to any exhaust leaks and so far none in the years since replacement. Cracks unfortunately don't always form in the same place. I've seem the break at weld seams, runner joints, it is completely random and it is because of the uneven heating and cooling of the manifold + cheap materials used. Exhaust wrapping it could work on an existing cat but if you had a new cat I wouldn't bother until it cracked again. The warp on my particular cat with the flange plate that bolted up to the motor. Placing it on a flat surface it was evident that it was bowed or something weird was going on. The new cat's flange is straight and true and screwing it onto the engine block at the time I distinctly remember seeing it mate up PERFECTLY to my cylinder head which means that my head obviously wasn't warped as bad as the old flange. That being said, the old cat despite repeated reweld fixes didn't work b/c I would weld the manifold out of car when the flange was "unloaded". This basically allowed the small crack to close up making a proper weld difficult. When the repaired manifold was put back onto the car and bolted up snugly then it would pull the bow out of the flange which then "stretches" the metal on the repaired section which means it will crack again. After repeated fixes I gave up and said screw it, put a new one in and I haven't looked back at it.
      If you get the exhaust wrap for cheap I'd say go for it. I was too lazy to bother with ours and just opted to shell out the funds to buy new - no regrets and the car runs like a champ at 330, 000+kms.

    • @MrOTcomputer
      @MrOTcomputer Před 4 lety +1

      @@piercedasian > Thank you. Much appreciated. I'm thinking since I bought a new maniford/cat for Honda Civic 2001 that I will just install the new one without wrapping it as long as the flange and head is not warped. Thanks again.

  • @andrewlemon2717
    @andrewlemon2717 Před 5 lety +1

    where can I buy the catalytic converter at for a low price? Can you send me a link

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety

      Unfortunately the only places I can suggest are online Honda dealers. I purchased mine from the local Honda dealership and they're not cheap. You could go aftermarket cats BUT the problem I've read is the quality of the cats is often not very good (worse than OE) and they often can make your ECU throw emission error codes.

    • @declanosbourne62
      @declanosbourne62 Před 5 lety +1

      you can buy parts on these websites,
      google or rock auto.

  • @sherwinorellana5349
    @sherwinorellana5349 Před 5 lety

    I have the same car and my exhaust manifold gasket is cracked and all exhaust is escaping from the top of the manifold, will this cause codes P0401 & P0420 to pop up ?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety +1

      Difficult to say but if you have an exhaust leak that chances are that it will make your car throw DTCs.

  • @steven4894
    @steven4894 Před rokem

    Good video. Thanks! 👍

  • @kesu90
    @kesu90 Před 4 lety

    Hi! Nice job on the video.
    How do you know the doughnut gasket is still good? I have an issue where I smell engine bay fumes in the cabin when climate control is on. I think there might be an exhaust leak somewhere which is causing the engine bay fumes to be routered to the climate control. Any ideas on what can be done here?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      I generally look for grooving, cracking and separation. Sometimes old gaskets last forever. I have seen many gaskets especially those in the rust belt just completely fall apart in a span of just a few years so your mileage may vary. Visual inspection is often good enough. Worse case scenario is that it’s easy to swap out IF you feel there is indeed a leak. Hope that helps.

    • @kesu90
      @kesu90 Před 4 lety

      @@piercedasian thanks!

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      You’re welcome!

  • @michaelbartnicki9464
    @michaelbartnicki9464 Před 4 lety +2

    Just bought one from 1aauto for 199.00 with a heat shield and a 5 year warranty, I haven't installed it yet but I've already got a check engine light so I do not care about that. We do not have emissions testing in Michigan so that is not a concern either

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      I wish we could but cat manifold combination units here for so cheap. Sadly in Canada everything is expensive.

  • @jessiequiroz8731
    @jessiequiroz8731 Před 2 lety

    Can I use an after market exhaust that doesn’t have the sensors if it’s more race performance wise

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 2 lety

      you could but then you may get a check engine light due to deviating from the factory's emissions design parameters.

  • @laviebanale
    @laviebanale Před 2 měsíci

    I have a 2016 CRV. Is the procedure the same?

  • @IntegrityJack
    @IntegrityJack Před 5 lety

    The aftermarket manifold I ordered had one bolt hole misaligned - the one at 3:56. I put all other bolts but that one. Will this cause me issues? Felt very tight and secure

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety

      hmm interesting. Can you not loosen that bracket off the engine block and get it to fit or is the misalignment really off? Ideally it should be bolted up b/c any engine vibrations will put stress on the exhaust manifold studs and bolts which is part of your cylinder head. I'd strongly recommend you try to loosen that bracket to see if you can get it to align so that things can be all bolted up as how the factory intended it to be. If you can't then there isn't much you really can do.

    • @IntegrityJack
      @IntegrityJack Před 5 lety

      @@piercedasian Is there a way to loosen the bracket?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety

      @@IntegrityJack I believe it is simply bolted onto the engine block with a bolt or two no?

  • @freshal4.012
    @freshal4.012 Před rokem

    The 12mm nuts at the top are seized on pretty tight for me. I’ve soaked them PB Blaster a few times with no luck. Would it be safe to hit them with a propane torch for a little bit?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 11 měsíci +1

      I find the best way to get off seized nuts is to use penetrating lube (try liquid wrench I find it works better) and then after soaking for a few hours or days get a long wrench on it and give a quick "blow" or smack with your hand. If you hear it "creak" then apply more lube and then retighten the nut or bolt a tiny bit and walk away. Repeat this process repeatedly until you're able to work the fasteners loose. I wished I filmed the impossible spark plug removal on an old Honda I just worked on last week. The plugs legit couldn't be removed by me or 2 other shops and I took a different approach to get the plugs out and guess what? I got ll the plugs out with ZERO damage. Just took patience, a good amount of liquid wrench and patience of going back and forth to let the penetrant work properly.

  • @patrickhuskey8277
    @patrickhuskey8277 Před 4 lety

    Where should I go to get a replacement heat shield?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      Honda is your best bet. They still make the part and it will be a perfect fit.

  • @blakeemel3819
    @blakeemel3819 Před 2 lety

    hey is there a reason you didnt weld anything my mechanic shop thinks i have to weld it on

  • @Yomero2006
    @Yomero2006 Před 5 lety +1

    Hi dude I just subscribed on your channel :), I would like to know how I can remove an internal screw in the head engine, The screw what I doing mention is visible over the minute 6:00 (central-screw), it got swept, What I can do? I will appreciate so much your help. thanks

    • @TheJazz1240
      @TheJazz1240 Před 4 lety

      I have the same issue.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      Odd as this might sound I just received your comment to my video a year later! Hopefully you were able to fix your stripped screw problem.

  • @americanme9933
    @americanme9933 Před rokem

    Thanks for the help.

  • @YouseemyiPhoneLMAO
    @YouseemyiPhoneLMAO Před 5 lety +1

    Perfect

  • @daviddu7847
    @daviddu7847 Před rokem

    Can i do the same procedure for 2007 honda civic hybrid?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 11 měsíci

      Not sure about the civic hybrid but the general layout of all Hondas are extremely similar. If it look nearly the same then odds are its the same.

  • @pablocantor192
    @pablocantor192 Před 4 lety +3

    Where is the EGR valve on this model?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +3

      The EGR on these models are generally located directly to the left of the valve cover.

  • @ronniewestcott6697
    @ronniewestcott6697 Před 2 lety +1

    great iob,thanks.

  • @bobjones9727
    @bobjones9727 Před rokem

    great video

  • @gooondie
    @gooondie Před 5 lety +7

    My god, you’re Canadian 🇨🇦

  • @EpicVani
    @EpicVani Před 4 lety

    Anyone know where to buy the mounting bolts for the headers I’ve tried finding the same size from a hardware store and they just don’t go on correctly. If anyone could direct me on that it’s be appreciated thanks.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      the only place to really get them and have them fit perfectly is your local Honda dealership. They're little studs so they can't really cost all that much.

  • @2derekjeter2
    @2derekjeter2 Před 3 lety

    After removing and after re install my car has a purr feeling to it kinda like a vibration you can feel it when you’re in the car and can kinda hear ir

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety

      That's just low idle and how the harmonics of the engine is playing with the car's chassis. Mine does that too. No cause for concern.

  • @vernonbosshard9317
    @vernonbosshard9317 Před 4 lety

    I have three Civics, 2001 EX, 2002 EX, and 2004 LX, the LX has a manifold/Cat combo, the others don't, looks like they have a header design, puzzled why Honda did that. Is it the yr model that makes the diff or the LX vs EX? If I look up a manifold for 2001 to 2005 it shows the Cat design only. FYI Make sure you replace that cam plug if you own one of these, your trans will take an oil bath if you don't.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      Ah yes... so the easiest way to tell which cat/header combo is to look at the motor and establish whether or not it has v-tec. The 1.7 literals NON-VTEC DX, LX, EX models (In Canada at least) used the cat combo and the Si and the Acura EL's used the header/ downpipe cat setup. In Canada the Si is the EX in the US, the LX here is the EX in the US and the DX I believe is the DX. The Si in the USA is the SiR in Canada.

  • @aaricdrummond6556
    @aaricdrummond6556 Před 2 lety

    Do honda 2002civic lx have too catalytic converter

  • @saqibhashmi9008
    @saqibhashmi9008 Před 3 lety

    Sir can you let me know the purpose of changing catalytic converter and i do have one question that is
    I am having Honda civic 2005 1.5CC problem is my car is not going above 120KM/H after that speed or after 3 RPM the sound of eninge is coming very loud.
    Can you help me on this
    Thanks

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      The cat converter on my car had several large cracks in the manifold and despite repeated rewelding of the cracks that it wasn't in my best interests to keep wasting time on it. A leaky cat converter not only diminishes performance but it can leak deadly carbon monoxide fumes that under the right conditions, can enter the cabin of the car. I did it for safety reasons and the slight improvement in performance was a secondary benefit.

  • @bohdanked
    @bohdanked Před 2 lety +1

    Wonder why not trying to weld the crack when the manifold is bolted to the engine. This way the manifold is in it's "stressed" shape. Also I saw somewhere people drilling a small hole at the end of the crack to prevent it from propagating. I'm not a welder nor a mechanic, I'm just wondering.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem +1

      I considered that and even tried but the crack kept coming back. I tried everything in my powers to NOT have to spend nearly $1000 on a replacement manifold but alas my previous attempts were futile. Since the new cat was installed the car has run great and it hasn't given me any grief since.

  • @homeicey
    @homeicey Před rokem +1

    Hi thanks for this very I formative video. Which dealer did you buy it from? The one I just called charging too much around $2k only for the cat.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem +1

      I bought from a local Alberta acura dealer because strangely they were cheaper than honda for the same exact part. Back when I did this video the cat was something wild already at a cost of $1200-1300? The parts guy cut me a deal and sold this to me for around $1100 all in with taxes. They're $2000 now? Jeepers!

    • @homeicey
      @homeicey Před rokem

      @@piercedasian yup 2k...hmm let me try Acura, thanks

  • @NoahsArk4532
    @NoahsArk4532 Před 3 lety

    The bolts on my heat shield are beyond rusted/corroded do you have any advice on how I could possible get it off? do I have to screw the heat shield off or could I break or snap it off? Would that matter? The bolts are so far gone and the shield is pretty lose

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety

      Just twist the bolt until it breaks off the shield and then get the manifold out where you can either ditch the shield altogether or you can drill out the broken bolt and put a new one in. I've run several of my honda's with no heat shield and so far no melted parts under the hood.

    • @NoahsArk4532
      @NoahsArk4532 Před 3 lety

      @@piercedasian is the bolts that hold the heat shield (top two bolts) bolted into the manifold? Or are they separate bolted into something else? Because I honestly might just crack on them until they snap because I could care less about the heat shield honestly. Also do you have an Instagram I can contact you on and maybe answer some question for me?? I’d really really appreciate it!

  • @anahiguillen7211
    @anahiguillen7211 Před 3 lety

    Okay so i did that since it had a crack but it’s overheating still and it clogged so we don’t know how to fix it or clean it? Any help?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety

      If the cat is clogged then really the only real way to fix it is to replace the cat with a new one but before doing so you have to find out what is wrong with the engine that caused the cat to clog up in the first place.

  • @cjwilliams4617
    @cjwilliams4617 Před 4 lety

    where would you get the unlock code for the radio ?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      Honda dealership by giving them the serial number of the unit. You can retrieve the number by holding a combination of buttons to reveal the s/n which you then take to the parts department at Honda to get the unlock code. Check your owners manual to determine that key press combination.

  • @williamnelson1490
    @williamnelson1490 Před 2 lety

    Did it need to be welded on

  • @ohstratz4747
    @ohstratz4747 Před 3 lety

    question, i replaced my 02 sensors down and up stream and i still have a p0420 code, should i just replace cat?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      hmm, if you're still getting that error there could very well be an exhaust system leak where the cat meets the engine or a crack that you can't see. As crappy as this news is going to be, you're likely going to have to replace the cat as I suspect there is a large enough crack to throw your o2 sensor readings off. Best thing to do is unbolt the cat and do a thorough inspection to identify if and where a crack might exist.

    • @NeverStop909
      @NeverStop909 Před 2 lety

      I thought P0420 codes are pretty much replace Cats

    • @JrSpitty
      @JrSpitty Před 2 lety

      @@NeverStop909 Usually. But the cause isn't usually a cat failing on its own. Cats usually last the lifetime of the car assuming its engine is operating healthily. Oil burning, misfiring, exhaust leaks, faulty o2 sensors... anything that can cause an erratic downstream o2 reading will set that code.

  • @ChathuraLakmalBest
    @ChathuraLakmalBest Před 3 lety

    Hi what is the plastic thing on the hood? What is it called?

  • @nelsonredondo1598
    @nelsonredondo1598 Před rokem

    Hey I installed a new catalytic converter manifold lx but now I’m smoking from my o2 sensor area and my headers are cherry red

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem

      Whoa that's not right. Where did you get the cat converter from and was your engine running properly prior to this replacement? Cats that run cherry red are often a result of unburned fuel getting the cat. I'd identify the problem of why your motor is dumping raw fuel into the cat before continuing to drive the car.

  • @nathanmacy5417
    @nathanmacy5417 Před 3 lety

    So I’m trying to do this on my 2001 civic. I installed it, and there was a leak sound afterwards. I took it to the shop and they said it was the wrong part and not sealing. I returned it and ordered one from a different website. Same thing, it’s not sealing. Any ideas?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety

      what trim line is your civic? Is it an LX? DX? These things should fit perfectly if you got the right cat for the engine application.

    • @nathanmacy5417
      @nathanmacy5417 Před 3 lety

      piercedasian it’s an LX

  • @muhammadbilalkhan7447
    @muhammadbilalkhan7447 Před 3 lety

    Are i use Any other car cytalytic use in my civic 2001 vti oriel?????

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety

      I am not familiar with the VTI oriel. Where is this civic located?

  • @cabdolla
    @cabdolla Před 4 lety

    Can anyone tell me the part number on the bracket at the bottom that goes to the engine block? Mine was siezed onto the cat and I had to just leave it on the old cat and toss it in trash. Need a replacement part ASAP.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      You can likely find the bracket on a parts diagram if you go to www.hondaautomotiveparts.com

    • @cabdolla
      @cabdolla Před 4 lety

      piercedasian I was able to find it and put in a new bracket. It cost a pretty penny $70!

  • @miguelrangel2997
    @miguelrangel2997 Před 11 měsíci

    Hey man I hope you can answer me I’ve did what you did but mine start smoking fro the censor one which is the top one and I don’t know what went wrong.. I’ve just spent money on a new catalytic convertir and censors and still not working… can you tell me what can it be.. or any advice…thank you…

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 11 měsíci

      that is too difficult to know exactly without understanding what issues you were having in the first place. Was the engine running properly prior to you replacing the cat converter? What was the reason why you had to change it?

    • @miguelrangel2997
      @miguelrangel2997 Před 11 měsíci

      @@piercedasian well before I change the cat I put a new crankshaft censor and a oxigen censor as well and when I change the cat I noticed that the other censor was bad as well so I got a new one but now that I got it in place is not working anyway my Honda is 2003 and the censor that blow smoke is top one under the hood and I did all of that cus while driving it always loose power and even die on me .. thank you for you time…

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 11 měsíci

      hmm, I'd double check your ignition timing. Since you replace the crankshaft sensor that I'm going to be inclined that it may be related to that issue.

    • @miguelrangel2997
      @miguelrangel2997 Před 11 měsíci

      @@piercedasian ok I even was able to drive aster I checked and replaced the crankshaft to see if it was fix and I drove it for like a week before that there was no smoke the smoke was after I change the cat along with the censor im about to try again and keep looking maybe and hopefully is just while for a couple of day s .thank you again..

  • @shimmy619
    @shimmy619 Před 2 lety

    how did you remove those spring bolts from the bottom. I can't get them out for the life of me.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem

      sorry for the late reply. I douse them in a good healthy amount of a quality penetrating lube (not WD-40) and use a wrench and impact gun to bang them out. Worse case is that you cut them out and buy new ones.

  • @dannp9026
    @dannp9026 Před 2 lety

    Yea my cat I could tell was going bad on my 05 civic it would reach 80 with the pedal all the way down then when I slightly let go of the gas it just darted out with some power it was weird. Can’t wait to get my new cat Wednesday can’t wait to get full power again my car has 160k I guess that cat was done.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem

      it's really interesting how cats fail. Knock on wood that I have never had a cat fail on me. My civic has 365, 000kms on it and runs like a champ and barely eats any oil. Replaced the cat around 275, 000kms and its been great!

  • @deepakbriglall5845
    @deepakbriglall5845 Před rokem

    Great video and i had a question for you. So i see that some civics have a catalytic converter on the manifold, and some have it underneath in the middle of the car. Does this depend on your model or something? Thank you.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem

      You are correct! The integrated cat converter on manifold design is for the non-vtec versions of the motor while the 1.7 liter versions (namely the Si in Canada or the EX in the USA) or even the Acura 1.7 EL will have the cat beneath the car.

    • @deepakbriglall5845
      @deepakbriglall5845 Před rokem +1

      @@piercedasian got it makes sense. Thank you so much for the reply

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem

      Not problem have a great day!

  • @joeparham2889
    @joeparham2889 Před rokem

    Any brand of cat converters that are good? 1100 is too much for me. I need to service my 2005 civic converter because it has rusty exhaust flange surface. Thanks!

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem +1

      You might be able to get a muffler shop to weld a new flange on the converter. Before going out and buying a new converter that you should look at that option first. Alternatively if you insist on buying a new cat that you can look at ones made by Walker. They seem to have reasonably consistent quality. Just stay away from the ebay specials that tend to be hollow cats that have no real catalysts in them.

    • @joeparham2889
      @joeparham2889 Před rokem

      @@piercedasian thanks for your reply!

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem

      Np!

  • @uhFluxy
    @uhFluxy Před 4 lety

    So I got a question I’m trying to help a buddy out because at advanced auto they are selling the manifold for $400+ which I think it way to high to sound correct, so I told him to look online and we came across two different websites selling them for $200 but it calls it the cat converter assembly, I’m just wondering if these are the same things or not, in the thumbnail of what they’re selling it shows the whole exhaust manifold or header whatever you want to call it, but I’m worried that it’s just going to send him a catalytic converter. He also has a crack in his manifold which they have tried to weld multiple times, I think the problem is the manifold being cast iron which is hard to weld together and to other metals because of how it expands in heat or somthing like that. Don’t quote me on that tho I’m no welder.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      I thought I had replied to this but maybe not. Going with a non-Honda cat can be sketchy because not all manifolds are built to Honda's spec. I've heard of some folks going to aftermarket route with zero issues and some have had nothing but issues with the check engine light coming on.
      Now as far as what the actual part should be called: The 7th gen civic came with 2 different styles of cat converters. If you're driving the non Si or a Non-vtec civic then you need the cat converter assembly. It is called an assembly b/c the cat converter is at the FRONT of the engine and is part of the exhaust manifold. If you drive a Si or 1.7 VTEC model then you have a separate exhaust manifold and cat converter (the cat converter is located on the downpipe down stream of the engine). I suspect that since you're watching my video that you likely have a 1.7 liter engine non-voter which means you need the cat converter/exhaust manifold assembly.
      Hope that helps.

  • @kneebarx
    @kneebarx Před 2 lety

    thats a sick crx

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks! She's my baby and lives mostly a garage queen life these days.

  • @ELPADRINO507
    @ELPADRINO507 Před 4 lety

    What is the torque spec for the bottom bolt and spring bolts?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety +1

      just snug them up until they can't turn anymore. They do NOT need to be torqued down too tightly at all. If I remember correctly it was something very low like 29 ft-lbs.

    • @ELPADRINO507
      @ELPADRINO507 Před 4 lety

      @@piercedasian Thanks.

  • @adrianf339
    @adrianf339 Před 5 lety +1

    so its the same part for either a 01-05 year model???

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety

      yes as long as you have the civic model where the catalytic converter is directly attached to the manifold like the one shown in this video. On the Si models it is a completely different system so just make sure yours looks the same as mine.

  • @9kful
    @9kful Před rokem

    My car had about the same miles, is it worth fixing it?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem

      that really depends on you. If you feel your car is in good shape and has lots of life left in it then why not. I didn't even hesitate to change mine out and it was approaching 275, 000kms. We still drive this car around today and we're approaching 400, 000kms now!

  • @Bababooey29
    @Bababooey29 Před 2 lety

    Hey I would like to know how do you know if your ex uses that manifold/cat assembly? I have an ex with Cali regulations but my car doesn’t have that? Also are you using OEM honda o2 sensors?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 2 lety +1

      a US EX model is likely the same cat setup as the VTEC versions of the civic in Canada. it is underneath the car and not integrated with the exhaust manifold. Yes I am still using the factory Honda sensors.

    • @Bababooey29
      @Bababooey29 Před 2 lety

      @@piercedasian I’ve been having a lot of trouble with gas mileage and they keep saying that it’s the cat which I replaced or the O2 sensor which I also changed. The mechanics I went to were no help either

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 2 lety

      @@Bababooey29 A bad cat isn't likely going to cause you poor fuel economy but rather poor engine performance with hardly enough power that it used to have. Can you better describe your issues in great detail by email it to piercedasian@gmail.com?

  • @vincentrolfe1384
    @vincentrolfe1384 Před 3 lety +1

    I think your motor is not the 1.7L with variable valve timing option. My VVT 1.7L has a different manifold for more mid range. Wish you could have purchased the upgrade as it really helps
    from 3500 on up being an interference manifold. Next time a manifold is warped take it to a machine shop and have them mill it flat for $85 US and you will not have the cracking. Another possible cure is to cut the mounting flange of the manifold between the 2 & 3rd pipe and that should take care of the uneven expansion and cracking. Did that on a Mitsubishi 1500 manifold Mirage with good results. If an oxygen sensor at the manifold close to the head is not correct, that will cause the manifold to get too hot and warp.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      You are correct, since this is a Canadian LX edition that it comes with the non-VTEC motor. Only the Si's came with the 1.7 VTECs and the SiR's came with the 2 liter high output variant. Good tips on the manifold fix. Never crossed my mind to fix it that way.

  • @albertcruz3232
    @albertcruz3232 Před 4 lety

    Did you have any overheating issues?

  • @thepatriot2603
    @thepatriot2603 Před 3 lety

    How much does a shop usually charge to do this?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      with the converter plus labor you're looking at roughly $1400 CAD.

  • @johnh9507
    @johnh9507 Před 2 měsíci

    how much did you pay for a oem piece, that had to be the same price of what the car is worth

  • @NCMEDIC216
    @NCMEDIC216 Před 6 měsíci

    Do you remember if all three nuts for the manifold are the same exact nut?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 6 měsíci

      they are the same exact nut with I believe 2 of the bottom ones are bolts that are also the same. All use a 12mm head.

    • @NCMEDIC216
      @NCMEDIC216 Před 6 měsíci

      I think I either lost one or it was missing one. Do you know where I could find a new one?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 6 měsíci

      easiest place to get one is the local honda dealership or rock auto.

  • @user-cw3yh1br6p
    @user-cw3yh1br6p Před 4 lety +1

    Good

  • @Bordy2023
    @Bordy2023 Před 4 lety

    Anyone that have the same issue right now? What can this effect in the long run if it isn’t change?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      If you don't change the cat you get poorer emissions, it can impact your fuel economy due to the o2 sensor not getting the correct air fuel ratio readings, it hinders engine performance due to inaccurate air fuel ratios, it is noisier and most importantly it can leak carbon monoxide into the engine bay where it can easily enter the passenger compartment. I smelled exhaust inside the car often when the manifold was cracked which was why I replaced it with a new one.

    • @slowazzes1972
      @slowazzes1972 Před 4 lety

      Nothing you just make a liberal mad, and if you live in California you cant smog your car

  • @OffTheBeatenPath_
    @OffTheBeatenPath_ Před 2 lety

    Rock Auto - $202 + about $80 shipping to Canada.

  • @darreneverding2499
    @darreneverding2499 Před 4 lety

    I have a 2002 civic EX and can't find a cat/manifold to replace it. I called a honda dealer and they said there wasn't one. I bought one from ebay for it but it don't fit. Way too big.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      a 2002 EX would be the Si up in Canada (not to be mistaken with your Si and our SiR). Your cat should be downstream past the back of the motor on the exhaust pipe. In that case you'll need to find the proper cat specific for the EX (USA) or the Si (if in Canada).

    • @darreneverding2499
      @darreneverding2499 Před 4 lety

      @@piercedasian So it sounds like on my EX there is only one Cat. the one under my car, but on the front it is an exhaust manifold only? The code I get is P0420, is that the Cat, or maybe an oxygen sensor? You are one of the best mechanics on CZcams, I changed my timing belt using your video and I actually did it right, first one I've done.

  • @barenekid9695
    @barenekid9695 Před 3 měsíci

    Isn't the Honda OEM catalytic as bought from the dealer.. Priced at MORE than your old car is actually Worth ??

  • @davercabrera7197
    @davercabrera7197 Před 4 lety

    Hello sir im confused on the price i need one also cracked down the middle. On ebay price is around 80, called honda they said 1k 🤷‍♂️ please answer thanks.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      Get the genuine Honda one. The ebay ones are fake or don’t have the catalyst material in them.

    • @davercabrera7197
      @davercabrera7197 Před 4 lety

      @@piercedasian so what do they go for then the catalyst one thanks for reply

  • @waynesanchez6504
    @waynesanchez6504 Před 3 lety +2

    You'll have less trouble, with exhaust manifold cracks, if you leave its heat shield OFF, allowing the metal to better "breath".
    Also, what happened to the two exhaust manifold BOLTS, the holes for which clearly are visible, when the manifold is separated from the head?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +3

      I'm not sure if leaving the shield off would help much since these manifolds are so terribly made.
      The manifold bolts were reinstalled in the head. No missing parts. Trust me on that one. I'm too anal to leave parts missing on my cars.

  • @jamesfair9751
    @jamesfair9751 Před 4 lety +1

    All you had to do was take that heat shield off run the car and get the manifold hot and weld that crack while bolted up on the car and hot then that bow would straighten out

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 4 lety

      I really considered that BUT that is risky since the fuel system is in such close proximity. Those braver than me can do that but I refused to take the risk of burning my car up in my garage.

  • @JoseMendez-rs7my
    @JoseMendez-rs7my Před 5 lety

    Check engine light ?

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 5 lety

      Nope just a physical crack that I could clearly see and the fact that I could hear and smell exhaust leaking in the cars cabin.

    • @dylanrutan100
      @dylanrutan100 Před 4 lety

      piercedasian I had a P0135 that turned to a P0420 (Catalyst deficiency) after replacing my up and downstream o2 sensors. My exhaust manifold has a crack in it similar to this one. My engine bay often smells of exhaust immediately after turning off the engine. I’ve been hearing a rattle but I believe it’s from the heat shield on the exhaust manifold. I’m considering buying a magnaflow OEM grade exhaust manifold/cat to replace it.

  • @AbandonedExplorationUrbex1979

    On my 2003 5 spd civic coupe I need to do the same Job. I have a crack in the same spot. I was thinking about applying quick steel on the crack but dont know how long it would last so I'll probably be ordering a new manifold.

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před 3 lety +1

      those crack filler fixes won't likely work on the manifold due to the fact that the manifold gets super crazy hot. I've tried welding the seam several times with little success due to the mild steel they use that is really crappy quality. If you're in the USA, you can likely find a good quality new cat for a pretty reasonable price. Cats in Canada are stupid expensive but I didn't have a choice. In many ways I'm glad I replaced b/c I've put well over 50, 000kms on the new cat and I haven't had a single issue yet.

    • @AbandonedExplorationUrbex1979
      @AbandonedExplorationUrbex1979 Před 2 lety

      @@piercedasian I ordered one from eBay for $150. Can’t afford a oem from the Honda dealer.

    • @AbandonedExplorationUrbex1979
      @AbandonedExplorationUrbex1979 Před 2 lety

      @@piercedasian besides the catalytic converter that is combined with the manifold on my LX civic is there also one underneath the car as usual or with my civic being the LX does it only have the one combined with the manifold?

  • @blazintayzincarchannel2342

    Would have really helped if you showed how you got the spring bolts on. 😕

    • @piercedasian
      @piercedasian  Před rokem

      spring bolts are easy. I just screwed them on. No real compressing was necessary since they compress when you tighten them down.