Light Weight billet Aluminum Protg pulleys. The Protege pulleys are made from 6061 T6 aluminum, anodized Satin silver, fully CNC machined and are stock size. So your stock or current belts will work.
The 3pc light weight pulley kit has a 5-6whp gain.
The 4pc kit has a 10-13whp gain.
No added noise and one of the best bang for the buck mods.
When ordering make sure to put what part you are ordering in the paypal description to ensure you get the part you wanted.
Medieval Protege Pulleys
Protg Alternator Pulley In Stock! Picture of the alt pulley can be seen below on the white shipping box. I will be making another 50 pieces very soon. If you want one of these and missed out, please add yourself to the list.
USA $69 retail
Paypal is celica_gts00@hotmail.com
Protg Water pump pulley. In stock
USA $99 retail
Paypal is celica_gts00@hotmail.com
Protege Light weight Powersteering pulley. IN STOCK!!
When ordering make sure to put what part you are ordering in the paypal description to ensure you get the part you wanted.
Powersteering pulley
USA $109 shipped!!
Paypal is celica_gts00@hotmail.com
Protege 3pc light weight pulley set. 5-6WHP gain alone (ALT, WP, PS) In Stock
$269 retail
Protege 4pc light weight pulley set. 10-13 WHP gain alone (ALT, WP, PS and Crank pulley) In Stock
$409 retail
Protege Lightweight Crank pulley. 5-7 HP gain alone.. Made from 6061 aluminum and maintaining it's stock size. In Stock
$169 retail
Alternator, Power Steering, and Water Pump Pulley Set Install
For power steering pulley only, do steps 2-7, and 17-20.
For alternator pulley only, do steps 1, 8b-13, 16a, and 19-20.
For water pump pulley only, do steps 8a, 10a, 10b, 14-16, and 19-20.
Required Tools & Items:
10mm - 17mm sockets and wrenches
Shop towels and/or rags
Pliers
Oil filter wrench (strap style, skinny)
New accessory belts (recommended but not required)
24mm impact socket and impact wrench (alt pulley only)
Floor jack (alt and WP pulleys)
Jack stands (alt and WP pulleys)
1qt power steering fluid (PS pulley only)
* Heavy Duty pulley puller (PS pulley only)
* Hydraulic press (PS pulley only)
* Table vice (PS pulley only)
** Wood block (PS pulley only)
** Hard rubber mallet (PS pulley only)
* It is recommended that you take the PS pump to a shop and have them take the old pulley off and press the new one on for you. If you plan to do that, you do not need the * tools.
** If you have the hydraulic press, or have a shop swap the PS pulley, you do not need these.
Step 1)
Start off by disconnecting your negative battery terminal. This is not just a warning or recommendation, it is a requirement since you will be working with the alternator. If you don't know where the negative terminal on the battery is, you shouldn't attempt to do this install yourself, so I will skip the picture for this step.
Step 2)
Disconnect the power steering fluid lines.
A) If you don't want to drain ALL of the fluid and then bleed the system after you are done, disconnect this line first:
B) Drain the fluid out of the fill bottle into a can or cup, and discard properly. Then, disconnect this line:
Make sure that you keep both washers with the bolt you removed here, set them aside for re-installation later.
Step 3)
Remove the power steering pump.
A) Start off by loosening the side tensioner bolt, located underneath the pulley on the passenger side. Shown here:
B) Loosen the pivot mounting bolt shown here:
C) With those loose you can remove the belt. Now go ahead and turn those 2 bolts the rest of the way off.
Step 4)
At this point it should be free. Pull it out of there and disconnect this wire harness, and then remove the sensor that it is plugged into:
Step 5)
This is where I recommend that you take the pump to a shop and have them pull the old pulley off and press the new one on.
I would have a picture of what I did for this step, but I had to scramble down to AutoZone before they closed and borrow their 5-ton puller. I ended up pulling mine off on the floor in front of their registers, lol. The stock pulley will more than likely not be reusable after pulling it off.
If you decide to do this yourself, continue with the next step. If you have the pulley swapped by a shop, you are done with the power steering pump for now so go ahead and skip to step 8.
Step 6)
Make sure you put a nut between the puller screw and where it pushes on the pump shaft. The nut needs to be small enough to not overlap onto the pulley, but give you a brace between the tool and the pump shaft. If you don't do this, it will expand the pump shaft outward as you are pulling the pulley off, and nobody wants that.
Here is a pic that shows where to place the nut, and it also shows the wimpy puller that literally met it's demise from trying to get this pulley off:
Put the pump in a vice. After you are set up with a adequate puller and the "protecting nut" is in place, pull the pulley off.
Step 7)
A) Clean the pump shaft thoroughly.
B) Place the pulley in an oven at 300 degrees for at least 10 minutes. Remove the pulley from the oven and as quickly as possible, press the pulley on. Use a hydraulic press, or if you don't have one, use the block of wood and mallet to press the pulley onto the shaft. If you use the mallet and wood block, make sure you are extra careful getting it on there straight. I can not emphasize this enough. Pressing it on crooked will ruin the pulley and possibly the pump shaft. You also need to make sure you press it so it is flush with the tip of the pump shaft. I pressed mine on a little too far in the pic, and had to use some shims to get the pulley lining up with the others.
You are done with the power steering pump for now, so go ahead and set it aside for later.
Step 8)
A) Break the 4 water pump pulley bolts loose. Do not loosen them very much yet! All you want is that first little turn to make them easier to loosen later when the tension is off of the belt. Think of it like loosening your lugnuts before jacking up the car.
B) Speaking of jacking up the car, you are going to want to do that now if you haven't already. Use secure points for the jack and stands!
Step 9)
Moving on to the alternator, start off by disconnecting the wires to it.
Step 10)
A) Loosen the alternator side tensioner bolt.
B) From underneath the car, loosen the pivot mounting bolt.
C) Remove the belt and then remove the mounting bolts that you already loosened.
D) If the car is not lowered, you can drop the alternator out through the bottom and skip to step 11. If you are running a 626 oil filter you will have to remove it to get the alternator out. A large exhaust can also complicate this.
Step 11)
If the car is lowered or the exhaust is in the way, you probably won't be able to get it out of there without removing a lot of extra parts, so you're going to want to rotate the alternator so the pulley faces the ground and let it rest there on the driveshaft.
Step 12)
Use the strap wrench to hold the pulley, and hit the 24mm nut with the impact wrench. The pulley will come right off now.
From here on out, you are more or less going reverse order on everything. Rather than post all the pictures twice, I am going to just type the process. Look back to the disassembly pics if you need any help on the location of stuff.
Step 13)
Put the new alternator pulley on the same way you took the old one off, and put the alternator back in place in the reverse order. Do not tighten down the bolts yet, just get the alternator back in place and hook the wires back up for now.
Step 14)
Moving back to the water pump, remove those 4 bolts that you loosened earlier, and the pulley will come right off.
Step 15)
Put the new water pump pulley on, the recessed side should face the motor and the flat side should face outward. Tighten down the 4 bolts as tight as you can get them, use the strap wrench to hold the pulley.
Step 16)
A) Put your new belt on there, make sure it is lined up properly, and then tighten down the tensioner and mounting bolts for the alternator.
B) Go back to the water pump pulley bolts one last time, and tighten them the rest of the way down.
Step 17)
Put the power steering pump back into place, but don't tighten the bolts all the way down yet. Put your new belt on there and make sure it is on all 3 pulleys properly. After the belt is lined up, tighten down the tensioner and the mounting bolts.
Step 18)
Replace the power steering fluid lines, and refill the bottle with fresh fluid.
Step 19)
Double check all of your bolts, belts, hoses, and wires that you have been working with. At this point there should be no leftover bolts, nuts, or washers. Make sure that there is clearance between the WP pulley and the PS belt. Hook the battery back up.
Step 20)
Fire up the car and check that everything is operating normally. Make sure the pulleys are rotating straight and not wobbling at all.
Step 21)
A) If everything is correctly done at this point, lower the car back down and turn the steering wheel lock to lock several times. Engine needs to be running.
B) Top off the fill bottle with fluid, and you are done. (alright)
The 3pc light weight pulley kit has a 5-6whp gain.
The 4pc kit has a 10-13whp gain.
No added noise and one of the best bang for the buck mods.
When ordering make sure to put what part you are ordering in the paypal description to ensure you get the part you wanted.
Medieval Protege Pulleys
Protg Alternator Pulley In Stock! Picture of the alt pulley can be seen below on the white shipping box. I will be making another 50 pieces very soon. If you want one of these and missed out, please add yourself to the list.
USA $69 retail
Paypal is celica_gts00@hotmail.com
Protg Water pump pulley. In stock
USA $99 retail
Paypal is celica_gts00@hotmail.com
Protege Light weight Powersteering pulley. IN STOCK!!
When ordering make sure to put what part you are ordering in the paypal description to ensure you get the part you wanted.
Powersteering pulley
USA $109 shipped!!
Paypal is celica_gts00@hotmail.com
Protege 3pc light weight pulley set. 5-6WHP gain alone (ALT, WP, PS) In Stock
$269 retail
Protege 4pc light weight pulley set. 10-13 WHP gain alone (ALT, WP, PS and Crank pulley) In Stock
$409 retail
Protege Lightweight Crank pulley. 5-7 HP gain alone.. Made from 6061 aluminum and maintaining it's stock size. In Stock
$169 retail
Alternator, Power Steering, and Water Pump Pulley Set Install
For power steering pulley only, do steps 2-7, and 17-20.
For alternator pulley only, do steps 1, 8b-13, 16a, and 19-20.
For water pump pulley only, do steps 8a, 10a, 10b, 14-16, and 19-20.
Required Tools & Items:
10mm - 17mm sockets and wrenches
Shop towels and/or rags
Pliers
Oil filter wrench (strap style, skinny)
New accessory belts (recommended but not required)
24mm impact socket and impact wrench (alt pulley only)
Floor jack (alt and WP pulleys)
Jack stands (alt and WP pulleys)
1qt power steering fluid (PS pulley only)
* Heavy Duty pulley puller (PS pulley only)
* Hydraulic press (PS pulley only)
* Table vice (PS pulley only)
** Wood block (PS pulley only)
** Hard rubber mallet (PS pulley only)
* It is recommended that you take the PS pump to a shop and have them take the old pulley off and press the new one on for you. If you plan to do that, you do not need the * tools.
** If you have the hydraulic press, or have a shop swap the PS pulley, you do not need these.
Step 1)
Start off by disconnecting your negative battery terminal. This is not just a warning or recommendation, it is a requirement since you will be working with the alternator. If you don't know where the negative terminal on the battery is, you shouldn't attempt to do this install yourself, so I will skip the picture for this step.
Step 2)
Disconnect the power steering fluid lines.
A) If you don't want to drain ALL of the fluid and then bleed the system after you are done, disconnect this line first:
B) Drain the fluid out of the fill bottle into a can or cup, and discard properly. Then, disconnect this line:
Make sure that you keep both washers with the bolt you removed here, set them aside for re-installation later.
Step 3)
Remove the power steering pump.
A) Start off by loosening the side tensioner bolt, located underneath the pulley on the passenger side. Shown here:
B) Loosen the pivot mounting bolt shown here:
C) With those loose you can remove the belt. Now go ahead and turn those 2 bolts the rest of the way off.
Step 4)
At this point it should be free. Pull it out of there and disconnect this wire harness, and then remove the sensor that it is plugged into:
Step 5)
This is where I recommend that you take the pump to a shop and have them pull the old pulley off and press the new one on.
I would have a picture of what I did for this step, but I had to scramble down to AutoZone before they closed and borrow their 5-ton puller. I ended up pulling mine off on the floor in front of their registers, lol. The stock pulley will more than likely not be reusable after pulling it off.
If you decide to do this yourself, continue with the next step. If you have the pulley swapped by a shop, you are done with the power steering pump for now so go ahead and skip to step 8.
Step 6)
Make sure you put a nut between the puller screw and where it pushes on the pump shaft. The nut needs to be small enough to not overlap onto the pulley, but give you a brace between the tool and the pump shaft. If you don't do this, it will expand the pump shaft outward as you are pulling the pulley off, and nobody wants that.
Here is a pic that shows where to place the nut, and it also shows the wimpy puller that literally met it's demise from trying to get this pulley off:
Put the pump in a vice. After you are set up with a adequate puller and the "protecting nut" is in place, pull the pulley off.
Step 7)
A) Clean the pump shaft thoroughly.
B) Place the pulley in an oven at 300 degrees for at least 10 minutes. Remove the pulley from the oven and as quickly as possible, press the pulley on. Use a hydraulic press, or if you don't have one, use the block of wood and mallet to press the pulley onto the shaft. If you use the mallet and wood block, make sure you are extra careful getting it on there straight. I can not emphasize this enough. Pressing it on crooked will ruin the pulley and possibly the pump shaft. You also need to make sure you press it so it is flush with the tip of the pump shaft. I pressed mine on a little too far in the pic, and had to use some shims to get the pulley lining up with the others.
You are done with the power steering pump for now, so go ahead and set it aside for later.
Step 8)
A) Break the 4 water pump pulley bolts loose. Do not loosen them very much yet! All you want is that first little turn to make them easier to loosen later when the tension is off of the belt. Think of it like loosening your lugnuts before jacking up the car.
B) Speaking of jacking up the car, you are going to want to do that now if you haven't already. Use secure points for the jack and stands!
Step 9)
Moving on to the alternator, start off by disconnecting the wires to it.
Step 10)
A) Loosen the alternator side tensioner bolt.
B) From underneath the car, loosen the pivot mounting bolt.
C) Remove the belt and then remove the mounting bolts that you already loosened.
D) If the car is not lowered, you can drop the alternator out through the bottom and skip to step 11. If you are running a 626 oil filter you will have to remove it to get the alternator out. A large exhaust can also complicate this.
Step 11)
If the car is lowered or the exhaust is in the way, you probably won't be able to get it out of there without removing a lot of extra parts, so you're going to want to rotate the alternator so the pulley faces the ground and let it rest there on the driveshaft.
Step 12)
Use the strap wrench to hold the pulley, and hit the 24mm nut with the impact wrench. The pulley will come right off now.
From here on out, you are more or less going reverse order on everything. Rather than post all the pictures twice, I am going to just type the process. Look back to the disassembly pics if you need any help on the location of stuff.
Step 13)
Put the new alternator pulley on the same way you took the old one off, and put the alternator back in place in the reverse order. Do not tighten down the bolts yet, just get the alternator back in place and hook the wires back up for now.
Step 14)
Moving back to the water pump, remove those 4 bolts that you loosened earlier, and the pulley will come right off.
Step 15)
Put the new water pump pulley on, the recessed side should face the motor and the flat side should face outward. Tighten down the 4 bolts as tight as you can get them, use the strap wrench to hold the pulley.
Step 16)
A) Put your new belt on there, make sure it is lined up properly, and then tighten down the tensioner and mounting bolts for the alternator.
B) Go back to the water pump pulley bolts one last time, and tighten them the rest of the way down.
Step 17)
Put the power steering pump back into place, but don't tighten the bolts all the way down yet. Put your new belt on there and make sure it is on all 3 pulleys properly. After the belt is lined up, tighten down the tensioner and the mounting bolts.
Step 18)
Replace the power steering fluid lines, and refill the bottle with fresh fluid.
Step 19)
Double check all of your bolts, belts, hoses, and wires that you have been working with. At this point there should be no leftover bolts, nuts, or washers. Make sure that there is clearance between the WP pulley and the PS belt. Hook the battery back up.
Step 20)
Fire up the car and check that everything is operating normally. Make sure the pulleys are rotating straight and not wobbling at all.
Step 21)
A) If everything is correctly done at this point, lower the car back down and turn the steering wheel lock to lock several times. Engine needs to be running.
B) Top off the fill bottle with fluid, and you are done. (alright)
Attachments
Last edited: