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How important is this gasket? Topic is solved

Help, Advice and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's P80 platform cars -- Volvo's 1990s "bread and butter" cars -- powered by the ubiquitous and durable Volvo inline 5-cylinder engine.

1992 - 1997 850, including 850 R, 850 T-5R, 850 T-5, 850 GLT
1997 - 2000 S70, S70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70, V70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70-XC
1997 - 2004 C70

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Chuck W
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Year and Model: 97 854 T5
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Re: How important is this gasket?

Post by Chuck W »

Sveedy wrote: 18 Nov 2020, 08:34 Well I found another post here that said that cars with the orange injectors did not have that retainer. Cars with blues or whites did.
I'm going out to the junkyard today to look at a recent arrival so I'm going to check this out. Seems like the two bolts hold the fuel rail down so I don't see how an injector could pop out anyway.
Yeah. It's helpful for keeping things together for assembly/disassembly, but not going to add anything for retention.

That bent tab was more likely not allowing the injector to seat properly in rail, thus causing the leak. How it got bent was another question.

Now that retainer does also hold on the pulse damper (or FPR, depending on model), so it's more needed for that, than anything.
'97 854 T5 - Manual Swap/M4.4/COP/NA cams/P2R Brakes/16T/ chassis bracing/ XC70 nose swap
'97 855 GLT - Hers. RN swap/16T/COP/VVT/exhaust/302s/Flashed M4.4/ chassis bracing/ 2 kid seats
'78 GLE - Waiting in the wings. Future whiteblock/T5 swap.

The Others- '83 TBird turbo, '85 Mercury Marquis LTS (1 of 134), '86 LTD Wagon, '81 Granada GL, '76 Beetle, '93 F-150 I6

bronco
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Post by bronco »

gas is funny stuff . I once drove my bronco all the way to new hampshire on a hot summer day and smelled gas when I arrived.

Its a big V 8 with a carb huge flat intake manifold next to the carb is a large depression that held about 8 ounces of liquid gas merrily boiling from the heat of the engine.

You can actually boil gas without dying and I guess I had been doing so for hours . Not something I ever would repeat after seeing it done.

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