Congratulations to vtecmec for winning May/June's Lude Of The Month, with his DIY Turbo BB1 build.

>>> Click Here For Profile <<<

Image

C5 - schmokes

Got a car that isn't a Lude? There's no condemnation here. Tell us about it!
User avatar
wurlycorner
Ye are glad to be dead, RIGHT?
Posts: 21195
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 3:33 pm
My Generation: 4G
Location: Chelmsford, Essex
Has thanked: 1911 times
Been thanked: 235 times

Re: C5 - life in the old girl yet?

Post by wurlycorner » Sun Jan 24, 2016 10:20 pm

On the way to the garage, the oil filler cap apparently came loose and fell off down the back of the engine :facepalm: garage think it's cause the engine cover was so loose (I knew there was only one of the resilient mount bolts actually in place at that time, so entirely plausible - I just hadn't had time to sort it before dropping the car off) :oops: :lol:
Not a disaster, but messed up the engine bay around that area. I told them not to replace the bolts 'cause I had a load I'd bought ready to do the job, so it came back with the cover in the boot and the engine bay still to clean up.

Grubby;
Image
Image
Look at the pools of oil in the recesses in front of the rocker cover :lol: (not all from this incident - been like that for a while!)
Image
Image
Also I noticed the fuel lines weren't clipped in properly and one was broken;
Image

Doesn't look much better, but believe me, it is.
Image
Also four new resilient bolts for the engine cover ready to go;
Image
One of the firewall insulator clips was missing, so got one off a breakers;
Image
Refitted the cable into the clip on the bulkhead, replaced the broken fuel pipe clip and refitted both lines but I found that the front plastic pipe was then rubbing on the metal fuel line, so I left it unclipped and resting on top. I think they've been refitted in the wrong order when the filter was last changed, so they don't sit right. I might sort that one day...

User avatar
wurlycorner
Ye are glad to be dead, RIGHT?
Posts: 21195
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 3:33 pm
My Generation: 4G
Location: Chelmsford, Essex
Has thanked: 1911 times
Been thanked: 235 times

Re: C5 - new stereo

Post by wurlycorner » Sun Jan 24, 2016 10:21 pm

Engine feels a bit different, not 'wrong' but not quite as smooth vibration-wise. Probably because it's had so many mounts out or because the new DMF is a bit tighter? I'll see if it settles down again, if not I might play around with the mounts.
Apart from that it drives spot on and the slight misalignment of the steering wheel is now sorted cause they adjusted the tracking 8-)


So, it was back to the upgrades... This time, Stereo.

I'd been collecting some bits for a while.
Image
Image
I prefer the OEM look of the original (just fits the dash properly) but I wanted DAB, the ability to stream internet radio off my phone and use it for calls via bluetooth (and a working replacement for the 'when I want to work' CD player) :evil: The mrs also has loads of music on her iphone so likes to use that. The above ticks all those boxes.

First fail #-o I'd decided not to buy a facia adapter, because I couldn't see any reason I wouldn't be able to re-use the outer switch surrounds, around the new radio. As it turns out though, the OEM radio front is slightly narrower than standard DIN and the outer covers attach to the oem stereo, not to the dash itself #-o
Image
Oh well, something to retro fit then...

For reference, back of the oem stereo;
Image
Multi-coloured connector is the CANBUS one connector, the other 2 are standard ISO.
Image

I wanted to keep steering column stalk control, so had picked up this;
Image
The big bag contains this;
Image
Which is the general C5 adaptor for all different kinds of stereo's. The small bag contains the add-on connector bespoke to each stereo manufacturer ;
Image
Plugs into the little box of tricks.

Then you end up with this spaghetti junction;
Image
The adapter plugs into the stereo like this;
Image

The CANBUS loom is unfortunately redundant (no connection to the main display) so I tucked it away neatly, using the existing loom clips inside the dash;
Image
The back supporting bolt at the back of the new stereo was longer than the original;
Image
But it worked fine.

Fortunately there is loads of space inside the dash of the C5 to neatly lose all that spaghetti wiring, without it snagging on anything or being jammed in.
Removing the glove box helped look up to the back in order to do that. Taking it out is unnecessarily difficult due to the outer lower screw being inaccessible :evil: For reference, this is what it looks like out;
Image
Found a nicely convenient spot to mount the DAB box - on top of the trafficmaster unit.
Image
The cable was a nice length to run through some existing loom clips, which gave a nice run up to where I had mounted the unit;
Image
Image

So then on with the aerial. Windscreen side trim off;
Image
Need to rub back the paint in a small area, to get a good ground for the aerial;
Image
The one I'd bought looked like this;
Image
Mounted like this;
Image
I looped the aerial lead up round the top clip so it wasn't under strain;
Image
Then ran it down in the existing clips again;
Image
Image
Extra length coiled up and stowed away to the left of the fuse box;
Image

All finished;
Image

However, here was my second fail #-o
DAB didn't work and some research >> here << it seems that not all DAB aerials and modules are created equal... and... I've bought one that doesn't work with my radio module #-o
So I've got to get another one and in the mean-time drive around with glove box missing (can't face refitting and removing it again) :evil:

But never mind, onwards...

Oh yep, it had a good clean, to - I finally removed the nose prints from the previous owners dogs, that were all over the boot windows :lol: (only been there a year :facepalm: )

User avatar
wurlycorner
Ye are glad to be dead, RIGHT?
Posts: 21195
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 3:33 pm
My Generation: 4G
Location: Chelmsford, Essex
Has thanked: 1911 times
Been thanked: 235 times

Re: C5 - back from the brink, odds done and a new stereo

Post by wurlycorner » Sat Aug 13, 2016 9:05 pm

Haven't updated this one for ages either :facepalm: and now can't find the pics from when I fitted a second (different) DAB aerial (which works fine with my radio) but never mind.

Anyway, it needed a bit more love. Last time I was under it I had spotted a couple of holes in the exhaust and that the gaitors on the rear suspension cylinders had holes/nicks in both sides :evil: also I hadn't chagned the coolant, the new front undertray was missing some fixings and hanging down, noticed the steering had a bit of movement in it and there was a slight knocking when driving over the fields at FOS, so little things were starting to mount up and time to get them sorted...
Exhaust holes;
Image
(back of cat)
Image
(Front of cat - I had already pu putty round it when I bought the car, but it had spreads and was rotten all round the weld tbf, so beyond saving)

Rear gaitors;
Image
Image

Hunted round for the best price on a cat (it comes complete as one section from the front flexi to back box) and the best I found was with autosessive, with a discount code one weekend. Great service, ordered one lunch time, turned up the next afternoon, on a supposedly 2 day delivery service! 8-)
Old and new;
Image
Image
after-market details of the replacement for any other C5 owners out there
Image
Image
Image
Piece of body lemonade to change 8-)
Image

Told you the old one was rotten! :lol:
Image

Next up was the suspension gaitors. Gratuitious flying shots, just 'cause the novelty of being able to do this still hasn't worn off :lol: ;
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image

Disconnected;
Image
Removed (next to new one in bag);
Image
What it looks like up inside the cylinder - self-centring bush for the push rod visible in the middle.
Image
And this is the push-rod;
Image
Cleans up a bit better! :lol:
Image
First side fitted;
Image
(The spring clip was a total sod to fit, until I got hold of the right tool, whereupon it was an absolute piece of body lemonade! Discussed that, here
One of the push rods was siezed in the trailing arm (see down inside here) so needed some persuasion with a hammer to remove...
Image

Didn't bother photographing the other side (got it all done too quickly) but what was annoying is that it was obvious that both sides had been 'patch up repaired' with glue. It hadn't worked and what really annoyed me was... Why?! The job took 30 mins start to finish (once I had the right tool for the clip) and the replacement gaitor costs about a fiver! That is takign cheapskateness to extremes... :roll:

Steering feeling odd was the nearside track rod end and the knocking was the ARB drop link on the same side. No play noticeable in them, but the balljoint on both was sort of 'sticking' when I twisted it back and forth.
Bought decent quality ones rather than cheapo, but bided my time till there was a decent discount code from GSF/eurocarparts (track rod end from one, ARB drop link from the other);
Image
Track rod end all came apart nicely, but the drop-link didn't :evil: The nut was tight as drokk on the thread to the point where the hex in the bolt (so you can hold the thread still while you undo the nut) was stripping.
So... out came a friend! :D
Image
DIE!!! :twisted:
Image
:lol:
First time I had used that tool in anger and it's brilliant. It has no torque, so unlike a big electric dic cutter you get absolutely no 'kick' on start up and it doesn't 'grab'. Means you can get it close into tight neat spaces without any danger of damaging anything. Big fan 8-)
Barely a scratch where I got in behind the nut :D
Image
TRW new replacement;
Image

All fitted;
Image
Also spot the new heat shield round the track rod end - the old one was missing, which is why the ball joint had failed I think :roll: (cooked by the heat from the brakes)

Speaking of which... I knew the back ones were coming up for some attention. When I bought the car, one of the calipers was slightly on the body lemonade (usual corrosion between the al caliper and steel arm causing it to twist off square) but it wasn't that bad...
Had a look to check on progress, because it's felt like the back brakes are doing nothing recently (back of the car lifting badly under braking) and...
Front didn't look bad still;
Image
The back though...
:shock:
Image

The other side is not much better either;
Image
Image
So it's not just new pads and retaining bolts needed, it's now a full set of pads/discs and calipers (clearly some sticking going on there, 'cause the other side is still perfectly square mounted).

Whilst I'm on with mentioning bodges...
Image
WTF is going on there with the 2 screws that have been driven into the cylinder body around the pad retaining bolt? :roll:

After that the car had a full coolant change (the old stuff was obviously WELL old) and I ran out of time to sort the undertray fixings. Left that for another weekend...

User avatar
wurlycorner
Ye are glad to be dead, RIGHT?
Posts: 21195
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 3:33 pm
My Generation: 4G
Location: Chelmsford, Essex
Has thanked: 1911 times
Been thanked: 235 times

Re: C5 - back from the brink, odds done and a new stereo

Post by wurlycorner » Sat Aug 13, 2016 9:30 pm

Next up was to try and sort the windscreen washers. They have been continuously blocking up ever since I've had the car. Probably because the cap had been broken when I got it and the filler is right at the front of the slam panel, so I think the bottle probably has loads of grit in it.
Used an air line to blow out the nozzles and hose that I could get at and, in my wisdom... :think: decided to try and blow back down the hose into the bottle...
BANG!
:roll:
:tosser:
Left it and drove home in a sulk.

2 weekends later I decided to tackle it. Bumper off and bottle removed;
Image
Image
Image
Fortunately the bottle was undamaged. This was the culprit;
Image
It's crappy rubber hose and where it had got oil on it, over time it had gone soft, so hardly had any strength in it.

Consulted the stock pile of broken prelude bits and...
Image
8-) a bit of 3rd gen prelude hose (better quality nylon stuff) exactly the right length :D

Gave the bottle a good wash out;
Image
All refitted and working spot on 8-)
Image

While I had the bumper off, I took the opportunity to finally fit the HID lights I bought earlier in the year;
Image
It was a bit of a mission tbf, with seized mounting bolts and the captive nuts shearing off, in really innacessible locations to get a loose nut back on afterwards :evil:
Mine came with the washer jets, but I haven't got the bottle, extra pump and the cut-outs in the bumper to go with it, so I haven't connected it up. Not sure how the hose for the washers is meant to be routed, so cable tied it up behind the bumper bar.
Image
There were a couple of nice little recesses in the plastic liners either side under the headlights though, so I assume it is meant to be reouted through them;
Image
Much brighter 8-)
Image
Image

Now I just need to plug in LEXIA and tell the suspension ECU that it has HDI headlights (so it communicates with the self levelling motors in them).

In doing all this, found more evidence of annoying jobby previous mechanics. I think it's had the hydraulic pump replaced before - found only 1 of the rubber suspension mounts fitted in properly (5 second job to fit the others back in the slits :roll: ) the boot over the electrical connections that stops them getting wet hadn't been refitted (15 second job) and various clips for the low pressure hoses not refitted. (10 second work)
Just... Why? why the hell do so many mechanics do such a jobby lazy job?! :roll: :guns:

User avatar
mercutio
LotM Winner
Posts: 14958
Joined: Sun Aug 08, 2010 8:45 pm
My Generation: 5G
Location: Sunny Manchester
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 3 times
Contact:

Post by mercutio » Sat Aug 13, 2016 11:23 pm

lots of great work there Iain 8-)
bristol_bb4 wrote:ahhh a 5th gen, i love 5th gens :D :lol:
Dino wrote:I loves the 5th gen really.... just dont quote me on it... ;)
4thgenphil wrote:Mines 4 1/4 unches mate, sorry

http://www.ludegeneration.co.uk/profile ... -t618.html

User avatar
indigolemon
The Chaos Engine
Posts: 6676
Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2010 1:45 pm
My Generation: 4G
PSN GamerTag: M149YSL
Location: Kelty, Fife
Has thanked: 20 times
Been thanked: 70 times
Contact:

Post by indigolemon » Sun Aug 14, 2016 10:09 pm

Hids makes a higher difference! Nice they were a factory option :-)
'On two occasions I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.' - Charles Babbage

User avatar
wurlycorner
Ye are glad to be dead, RIGHT?
Posts: 21195
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 3:33 pm
My Generation: 4G
Location: Chelmsford, Essex
Has thanked: 1911 times
Been thanked: 235 times

Re: C5 - general maintenance jobs and upgraded headlights

Post by wurlycorner » Sun Aug 14, 2016 11:13 pm

I forgot to say that I also sorted out all the undertray fixings (full replacement set bought from eBay for under a tenner) and un-lowered the car (put it back to proper ride height).
Looked better at the height I had it running at, but affects the ride quality (not the handling though) especially when towing the car transporter when unloaded (unloaded twin axle trailers/bumps just make the back jiggle up and down unless the height is right). plus what's the point in having a hydraulic Citroen that doesn't ride like a Citroen should? :tosser:
So, childishness over and maturity to the fore on that one! :lol:

User avatar
wurlycorner
Ye are glad to be dead, RIGHT?
Posts: 21195
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 3:33 pm
My Generation: 4G
Location: Chelmsford, Essex
Has thanked: 1911 times
Been thanked: 235 times

Re: C5 - general maintenance jobs and upgraded headlights

Post by wurlycorner » Mon Aug 29, 2016 1:12 pm

So, what do you do when you have a load of unused holiday from work to use up..?
Take a day off to work on the C5, of course! :) :? :| Last Weds was rear brakes day.
Correction: Last Tuesday was meant to be rear brakes day, but when I unpacked the calipers to look them over before fitting, I was not impressed with one of them;
Image
Image
Image
Not confident about that weld repair on the casting.
Image
But that aside, I was really not impressed with the cavities on the pad slides;
Image
Image
I could just see that building up with crap and making the pads stick, rattle or squeal.

Basically, I was not impressed and not prepared to fit it. IMO, the castings were life expired and should have been consigned to the bin. (Especially considering the other one I had bought for the same cost was obviously new! :lol: )
Image
Image
So I went back to GSF and they agreed to exchange it without a problem and got the replacement in next morning - which was another brand new one 8-) 8-) 8-) 8-)

So, Wednesday it was...
Old left hand;
Image
Image
Old right hand (note the contact area is off to one side, not over the correct part of the surface);Image
Reason being the misalignment of the caliper in relation to the disc, caused by disimilar metal corrosion between the mating faces of the caliper and arm bending the mounting bolts and pivoting it away. See the gap between disc and caliper here;
Image
Compared to the other side;
Image

I meant to take some pics of the back of the discs to show just how little braking was being done on that side, but I haven't got round to it.

All removed and cleaned up first side;
Image
The caliper retaining bolts have a reputation for being impossible to remove. They were no match for the ingersoll-rand impact gun :twisted: :D 8-)
The brake line union was an arse though. Had to take my time and be very, very delicate. No problems with rounding off, but it was stuck tight on the tube, so it was touch and go to get it off without shearing the pipe (twisting).

Having got the old caliper off, I could see the reason for the weld repair on the previous caliper;
Image
Image
Not sure what the hell citroen have done to the design here, because (from what I recall) basically the same caliper has been in use on the Xantia, XM, BX, CX etc... and I haven't ever had this problem on the Xantia or various CX's.
Presume for the C5 they've either reduced the quality of the alloy used, or saved material by slimming down the web that the retaining bolt goes through???
It explained what the 2 self-tappers and oversize washer was all about on the outside half of the caliper though - it was actually a very ingenious way of getting round the broken casting :D

Anyway, all built up, lovely shiny new stuff 8-)
Image
Image
Image
Image

Gave me a chance to try out my new toy :D
Image
Image
Brilliant bit of kit and changed all the fluid as a result.

So nice to have the car back braking properly (not diving).
To put it in perspective for you guys just how much the back brakes should be doing... Think back to the earlier pics and you'll see they're independant twin-pot calipers and I can tell you that the rear discs on a C5 are 282mm (so same as prelude fronts ;) )

User avatar
Merlin
Moderator
Posts: 12292
Joined: Fri Aug 06, 2010 9:04 am
My Generation: 5G
PSN GamerTag: Merlinbadman
Location: Edinburgh
Has thanked: 29 times
Been thanked: 188 times

Post by Merlin » Tue Aug 30, 2016 10:40 am

Weird that the calipers were different :?
Image
BA8......... BB4......... BB8.........The JDM Muscle Bus

User avatar
wurlycorner
Ye are glad to be dead, RIGHT?
Posts: 21195
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 3:33 pm
My Generation: 4G
Location: Chelmsford, Essex
Has thanked: 1911 times
Been thanked: 235 times

Re: C5 - brakes that work again (and will pass the MOT :D )

Post by wurlycorner » Wed Aug 31, 2016 7:55 pm

Merlin wrote:Weird that the calipers were different :?
As in the quality of the refurb ones being different?
Or have you been eagle-eyed and spotted the four holes on the back of the old calipers, round about where the securing bolts pass through? :hurr:

Post Reply

Return to “Non-Lude Profiles”