You know you own a gen-2 60 degree V6 when:
The labor guide quotes 4 hours to change the PCV valve
You Break the vacuum line to the MAP sensor while trying to do the rear plugs, and try desperately to glue it back on so you can *drive* it.
The valve cover gaskets leak at 60,000 miles
Go to tighten the massive oil-fill cap, only to have the ratcheting mechanism break just after you've muscle-tightened it, now it spins freely when trying to unscrew it.
Your throttle linkage has so much play, you can't get further than 94% WOT
While taking out the alternator, the positive post shorts to the plenum
Changing the serpentine belt would be a 30 second job if not for the "belt routing guide" plate, which you end up cracking when reinstalling.
it hesitates on acceleration from a stop, between 100-180* operating temp, and there's nothing you can do about it
The downpipe is bent like a stock honda tailpipe, and about the same size too.
During a tuneup, if one out of 6 spark plugs were to either be siezed in the head, or stripped, there's 100% chance it's on the rear head.
The labor guide quotes 4 hours to change the PCV valve
You Break the vacuum line to the MAP sensor while trying to do the rear plugs, and try desperately to glue it back on so you can *drive* it.
The valve cover gaskets leak at 60,000 miles
Go to tighten the massive oil-fill cap, only to have the ratcheting mechanism break just after you've muscle-tightened it, now it spins freely when trying to unscrew it.
Your throttle linkage has so much play, you can't get further than 94% WOT
While taking out the alternator, the positive post shorts to the plenum
Changing the serpentine belt would be a 30 second job if not for the "belt routing guide" plate, which you end up cracking when reinstalling.
it hesitates on acceleration from a stop, between 100-180* operating temp, and there's nothing you can do about it
The downpipe is bent like a stock honda tailpipe, and about the same size too.
During a tuneup, if one out of 6 spark plugs were to either be siezed in the head, or stripped, there's 100% chance it's on the rear head.
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