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Well this weekend I'm upgrading to Robby/IceShark cables and a new alternator. Last weekend was a sunroof fix (more on that below). That means to get to Maintenance Backlog Zero all that's left is
- hatch glass
- paint repairs (don't ask!)
- rocker panel rubber
- passenger door latch
- motor mounts
- oil change
- coolant slow leak
- etc and so forth and so on

Humor aside I thought it would be useful to post what I learned replacing a stripped sunroof gear for the second time. First time was about five years ago.
If you're familiar with the geometry of the sunroof struts, you know that the struts engage the sunroof through a slotted fitting such that if the strut is withdrawn all the way you can take the sunroof out, if engaged just an inch or so, the sunroof is locked down, and if engaged more than that first inch, they start to push the sunroof up.
And the google tells us that mysterious failures of this mechanism remain even when folks have otherwise adjusted everything to spec.
The driving mechanism uses slotted holes to bolt it to to the roof, allowing for adjustment by sliding the entire gearbox forward or back. The failure mode I discovered is, in my early '92 car, the gearbox could not be slid back far enough to allow the strut to easily slide into the sunroof slot - the strut ends up being too low relative to an ideal path of travel. So every time the sunroof is closed, the tab needed to FORCE its way into the too-high slot through to the "lock" position which really clamped down the sunroof as it attempted to get in there.
So... lots of stress on the gear - eventually it gave up the ghost.
The remedy is to remove the plastic gear mechanism from the car - four bolts - and extend the slotted holes in the right direction to allow the gearbox to slide back the additional 3/8" inch or so. I used a drill bit that matched the ID of the hole and just let it chew back into the plastic a bit.
Once this was done it was very easy to adjust gears and struts, check alignment, and bolt it back up. The struts now slide into the sunroof slots with hardly any resistance at all... just enough to keep the sunroof tight at speed.
And yes, my sunroof was adjusted all the way down already (the plastic adjusting screws in the sunroof gutter). Seems like a case of slightly-wrong build dimensions out of the factory.
Cheers.
1992 black/tan coupe, window express, koni struts/shocks, 17C2 wheels, guards <acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'><acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'>LSD</acronym></acronym>, pinion fixed, sound system, etc, etc, OCD for sure.
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Haha! So that's the problem - I need to keep it under 100mph!
My guess is that the relatively mild negative pressure would not strip the gear. The force from driving fast will pull UP - before I fixed my gears one side of my sunroof was loose and would predictably open itself at 70+ mph.
The design of the gearbox is such that upward forces are 90 degrees to the mostly horizontal strut - it slots into the housing of the gearbox and the stiffness of the steel strut holds the sunroof closed, not the gear teeth. The gear only pushes and pulls the strut forward and back. It's hard to explain without a diagram but the gear pushes the strut horizontally - the strut is slightly curved and the clever geometry of it all causes the horizontal movement of the strut to cause the roof to go UP.
Of course on the other hand you might be right. :lol: How many pounds of up-force at 100 mph do you think?
J
1992 black/tan coupe, window express, koni struts/shocks, 17C2 wheels, guards <acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'><acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'>LSD</acronym></acronym>, pinion fixed, sound system, etc, etc, OCD for sure.
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Bulti - yes I methodically checked each part of the system. Torque is now set low per Clarke's Garage recommendation - about 5 nm. Ha - it's really marvelously complex our sunroof mechanism. I have to believe a squad of over-achieving German engineers stayed up late many nights coming up with this Rube Goldberg machine and made it as complex as possible just to have some fun - limit switches, rotating cams, torque slip-clutches, worm-drive and toothed gears, micro-switches, cables, shafts, down-buttons that go up, up-buttons that go down... devilish.
I am very confident that on my car, at least, the gears are now operating in an un-stressed mode. Of course, having just said that I've jinxed the whole pooch and now they will strip tomorrow.
1992 black/tan coupe, window express, koni struts/shocks, 17C2 wheels, guards <acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'><acronym title='Limited Slip Differential'>LSD</acronym></acronym>, pinion fixed, sound system, etc, etc, OCD for sure.
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Flat out no problem over here.
Ritchie owner of a '92 Coupe Tiptronic with the following standardoptions: C00, 030, 139, 249, 258, 340, 383, 387, 403, 418, 454, 490, 494, 567, 573, 650, 690, 14951