scooter421
Active member
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- Location
- Queen Creek, Arizona
Hi all, I purchased my M1009 around June 2019 as a back up vehicle after a bad car accident. I'm getting healed up and I'm just getting started. So far, I've replaced the front end bushings, wheel bearings, brakes, seals, new tires and additional standard items (fluids, belts) from an old vehicle not driven much. From what I understand the previous owner had it several years and put a few thousand miles on it. I don't know where I'm going to go with it but I plan to stay as close to stock as possible....I think. It's hard to resist adding modern conveniences! Either way I'll have fun tinkering. I love driving it, I get a lot of looks and many thumbs up going down the road. I think I read somewhere on here someone had put a C-series air intake on the M1009 to help with the noise. Thank you, it does help! Also, someone posted the belt numbers from an M1009 out of Fort Bragg, thank you. The belts offered by computer selection at your auto parts store (Autozone, O'reilly's and Napa) are slightly off for whatever reason. I completed the relay swap and I've had no issues. I replaced the vacuum pump with Cardone select 90-1008 from Amazon and once the vacuum pod was removed ended up being a perfect match. The new pod works great, my transmission and my sanity greatly appreciate it!
Pictures of how I did the air intake are below. The tube is an irrigation drain line and irrigation offset adapter. I used a heat gun to shape the adapter to the "squarevol" air cleaner connection. I kept the heat on until the hose clamp was snug. The galvanized and aluminum bar stock I had laying around. The air intake is off an old Suburban I found at the junk yard. The drainage parts came from Home Depot. The key to making it work is the lip inside the air intake from the Suburban which matched the smaller inner diameter of the corrugated tube. I was able to trim down the corrugated tube edge to tuck inside the intake for a tight fit on the inner diameter of the tubing. I did this on my daughters C20 already, so I had scrap for a test fit. The test fit worked perfect, then I bought a new section of irrigation tubing and trimmed to fit. The tube came out of the intake too easily but the third time I got it right. If the corrugated tube edge is crinkling up too much when tucking it into the intake it will not stay and you've not trimmed enough. If you trim off too much it will tuck in easy but pull out too easy, it has to be just right. If you go this route, don't cut the corrugated tube for a perfect fit length wise, give yourself a several extra corrugations in case you have to trim to fit more than once! Hopefully, that makes sense. Whatever I do with my M1009 will be slow going but I'll try to post worthwhile tidbits when I can.
Cheers....Scooter
Pictures of how I did the air intake are below. The tube is an irrigation drain line and irrigation offset adapter. I used a heat gun to shape the adapter to the "squarevol" air cleaner connection. I kept the heat on until the hose clamp was snug. The galvanized and aluminum bar stock I had laying around. The air intake is off an old Suburban I found at the junk yard. The drainage parts came from Home Depot. The key to making it work is the lip inside the air intake from the Suburban which matched the smaller inner diameter of the corrugated tube. I was able to trim down the corrugated tube edge to tuck inside the intake for a tight fit on the inner diameter of the tubing. I did this on my daughters C20 already, so I had scrap for a test fit. The test fit worked perfect, then I bought a new section of irrigation tubing and trimmed to fit. The tube came out of the intake too easily but the third time I got it right. If the corrugated tube edge is crinkling up too much when tucking it into the intake it will not stay and you've not trimmed enough. If you trim off too much it will tuck in easy but pull out too easy, it has to be just right. If you go this route, don't cut the corrugated tube for a perfect fit length wise, give yourself a several extra corrugations in case you have to trim to fit more than once! Hopefully, that makes sense. Whatever I do with my M1009 will be slow going but I'll try to post worthwhile tidbits when I can.
Cheers....Scooter
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