Looks like quite a lot of oil has been flying around in that bell housing, i think i'd be trying to work out where that's come from and solve it while it's all apart....
Cheers

My money is on crank seal. Simply based on the fact that the gearbox oil level was spot on when I got the car despite the plugs having clearly not been off In Some Considerable Time. The engine side is also *way* more slimy than the gearbox side.Luxobarge wrote: Wed Feb 19, 2025 11:19 am Thanks for the updates Zel, will be interesting to see how that all goes.
Looks like quite a lot of oil has been flying around in that bell housing, i think i'd be trying to work out where that's come from and solve it while it's all apart....
Cheers![]()
OK, get your logic, but I'd have thought there's not a lot of oil on the crankcase side, so less likely? However, there IS a lot of pressure on the down-stroke, so I guess it could have been blowing through over time. I hope you're right, as presumably your engine replacement project will involve a new crankcase seal, so that should automatically sort the issue eh? Also if you're right you will previously have been losing a bit of crankcase pressure, so a good seal should result in a bit more power too.
The stuff on the gearbox side is actually pretty well solidified. I'll be going at it with the degreaser and a brush, but I'm not going overboard with it.Luxobarge wrote: Wed Feb 19, 2025 3:39 pmOK, get your logic, but I'd have thought there's not a lot of oil on the crankcase side, so less likely? However, there IS a lot of pressure on the down-stroke, so I guess it could have been blowing through over time. I hope you're right, as presumably your engine replacement project will involve a new crankcase seal, so that should automatically sort the issue eh? Also if you're right you will previously have been losing a bit of crankcase pressure, so a good seal should result in a bit more power too.
I'm hoping you're going to clean up all the old oil and mess, so you'll be able to see if you were right? Half an hour with some degreaser (I use central heating oil or paraffin) and a decent sized drip tray underneath should sort that.
Cheers![]()
Sort of. We've got a load of landscaping work going on, including digging up and re-laying one side of the driveway which had been totally destroyed by roots from a (now gone) tree. We are also having that side extended back by a bit which is enough to gain us an additional space. Aim being that the Trabant will live there, and once the 25 moves on that will be everything off the lawn.
Much as it pains me as I love driving the thing, it needs to move on. Single biggest reason is that it's such an absolute swine of a thing to find parts for. This has been made a thousand times worse by the fact that virtually every specialist breaker in Europe I've historically used to get parts for it (and a couple of French motors beforehand) are no longer willing to ship to the UK because of the utter nonsense involved in importing goods here now. Apparently there are a couple of good groups to ask in on Facebook, but the couple of times I've tried to ask about some parts I was greeted with nothing but silence. Autodoc (and similar sites) are all but useless as their parts lookup systems simply don't seem to differentiate between the S1 and S2 cars, and the injection/carb versions...and because Renault are Renault they seemed to like randomly changing parts between versions where it made absolutely zero sense to. Autodoc don't even list the right oil filter, and if it can't even get that right, you know you're in for a bruising if you start ordering more complex items. It just makes getting hold of even the most stupid components like a set of drop links an absolute pain.rich. wrote: Tue Feb 25, 2025 1:08 pm Sounds like a good plan.. I was impressed how easy you made it look reassembling the trabant.. are you planning to keep it? What's the plan for the 25?![]()