The engine dying out with you stop is most likely something leaking onto your spark plug and when the car over heats its your head gaskets (sorry if it's incorrect spelling). Mine did that a couple of a months ago.
So far, what I can tell is the distributor and fuel injectors off the older engine have to be put on the newer one. 1994 Accords are OBD1, 1997s are OBD2.
Angels
Wake-boards cost on average about $60,000. However, depending on what you want they generally vary between 30,000 and 90,000. The average price has risen from 20,000 in the 1997s.
The S mint mark on the coin identifies it as a proof coin that is only sold in proof sets from the mint. The retail value of a proof 1997s is $16.10 but if the coin was found in a bank roll or in change, it's now only worth face value.
There are really very few differences. For 1998 all US market new vehicles got second generation airbags standard. The 1997s had first-gen bags. Also, OnStar was an option in Lesabres starting in 1998. Other than for those to items and possibly some paint and pricing differences, a 1997 is the same as a 1999 Lesabre.
The "s" is the mint mark, or which mint struck the coin. S= San Francisco D= Denver (no mark) or P=Philadelphia O=New Orleans CC=Carson City (Nevada) C= Charlotte (North Carolina) There was also another D mint mark which was Dalonoga, Georgia. Both Charlotte and Dalonoga were in use before the Civil War and taken over by the Confederacy, along with the mint in New Orleans. The Charlotte mint was actually the first mint to strike gold coins with the first gold discovered in in the US, also in North Carolina.
A 1998 Liberty dollar coin is typically worth its face value of $1. However, if it is in uncirculated condition or part of a limited edition set, it could be worth more to collectors. It is recommended to have the coin appraised by a professional for an accurate value.
B - JanL - FebA - MarC - AprK - MayP - JunO - JulW - AugD - SepE - OctR - NovX - DecM - 1921N - 1922P - 1923R - 1924S - 1925T - 1926U - 1927W - 1928X - 1929Y - 1930Z - 1931A - 1932B - 1933C - 1934D - 1935E - 1936F - 1937G - 1938H - 1939J - 1940K - 1941L - 1942MM - 1943NN - 1944PP - 1945RR - 1946SS - 1947TT - 1948UU - 1949WW - 1950XX - 1951YY - 1952ZZ - 1953A - 1954B - 1955C - 1956D - 1957E - 1958F - 1959G - 1960H - 1961J - 1962K - 1963L - 1964M - 1965N - 1966P - 1967R - 1968S - 1969T - 1970U - 1971W - 1972X - 1973Y - 1974Z - 1975I - 1976O - 1977Q - 1978V - 1979A - 1980B - 1981C - 1982D - 1983E - 1984F - 1985G - 1986H - 1987I - 1988J - 1989K - 1990L - 1991M - 1992N - 1993O - 1994P - 1995Q - 1996R - 1997S - 1998T - 1999 (*)U - 2000 (*)V - 2001 (*)W - 2002X - 2003Y - 2004Z - 2005A - 2006B - 2007C - 2008D - 2009E - 2010F - 2011G - 2012Using barrel codes (such as those listed above) to date the manufacture are reliable on Remington rifles, as the company rarely changed barrels on a customer's rifle.Using these barrel codes to date a shotgun is somewhat unreliable, as shotgun barrels are often interchanged at random. One needs to be sure that the barrel is original to the gun before trusting the Barrel Code listing, above.(*) On 8/9/99, stopped stamping the barrels with the date code. They continued to mark the date code on the end flap of the shipping box. They resumed stamping the date code on the barrel on 10/1/01.