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Thread: Restarting an old engine

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    Moruya Heads/Sth. Coast, NSW
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    You are going to have to dismantle the engine, sticking it in a tub of diesel and ATF will cost a bundle and you will never get the oil out of the water jackets without hot tanking which involves dismantling the engine, bite the bullet, Regards Frank.

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    Gold Coast Queensland Australia
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    Quote Originally Posted by crash View Post
    Getting to the spark plugs is a real PITA on this beast. Will have to pull the plugs and put some ATF in. Will be awhile before I get around to tearing the heads off. Stuck valve is my guess as well. I wanted to avoid pulling it apart but will have to now. One more thing to add to the list.


    firstly, if you can turn it over to a point where it stops turning going one way and also stops turning going the other way,

    it's not siezed....

    but, in my opinion, it is most likely got a valve wide open that is stuck and won't spring back,
    so that is why it will not turn over completely.
    with the effort you have imparted so far, the head of the valve has been hit a few times and the stem is now probably bent.

    the only way to fix this is remove the heads.

    to persist is to impart further damage to the engine.
    one of the nasty things that could now happen if you manage to run it , is the head of the valve breaking off with resultant gross damage to the head, piston, cylinder walls.

    basically lunching the engine.

    blacknight dave said it before me,
    stop, pull the engine.
    Safe Travels
    harry

  3. #13
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    Jul 2006
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tank View Post
    You are going to have to dismantle the engine, sticking it in a tub of diesel and ATF will cost a bundle and you will never get the oil out of the water jackets without hot tanking which involves dismantling the engine, bite the bullet, Regards Frank.
    (1) The cost is not a burden as when finished you put a cover on the drum and use the stuff time and again. You can use second hand ATF saved from your own oil changes.

    (2) Silly me naturally thought that as it had not run for 25 years he is going to pull the engine and give it a rebuild, not try to fire it up and hope for the best.
    URSUSMAJOR

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
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    In the end, what's this engine worth to you? Check that no valves are stuck open by lifting the rocker covers and having a look. Tap the valves with a soft face hammer and see which ones bounce back. Then CRC or whatever penetrating oil is your fave, pull out the plugs and spray it in. The rust may be very minor and diappear with the first crank. It's up to you. In my youth I met a few rusted up motors that took brute force to break loose but then ran OK if a bit smoky from marked bores.

  5. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    Quote Originally Posted by bee utey View Post
    In the end, what's this engine worth to you? Check that no valves are stuck open by lifting the rocker covers and having a look. Tap the valves with a soft face hammer and see which ones bounce back. Then CRC or whatever penetrating oil is your fave, pull out the plugs and spray it in. The rust may be very minor and diappear with the first crank. It's up to you. In my youth I met a few rusted up motors that took brute force to break loose but then ran OK if a bit smoky from marked bores.

    i'm not in the business of fixing silly mistakes,
    so my advise is totally my opinion,'but to try to start it is silly,'it hasn't run for 16 years, has a blockage that stops it turning over fully.
    beating the valve to loosen it may do that, but it is a bad approach to something that is so far from regular maintenance.
    if he was to get it running and then get it on the road, it may fail in a most desperate situation.
    why not fix it now before so that the engine will also be roadworthy?

    i don't understand this 'on the cheap mentality'
    Safe Travels
    harry

  6. #16
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
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    Quote Originally Posted by harry View Post
    i don't understand this 'on the cheap mentality'
    Tapping the valves is for diagnosis, not loosening. If none stick, proceed to the next part of the diagnosis. It could be something as simple as caked combustion deposits that have fallen off. Seen that before. Once they have been softened by CRC and/or blown out by compressed air, the engine may turn just fine. If not, proceed to dismantle.

    Its always better to do the simple checks first.

  7. #17
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    Shepparton
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    There is little room to work on this engine in the vehicle, will have to wait a couple of weeks before I can get it out and start the tear down.

    One incident that we were very lucky not to damage an engine was when dad and I flat towed a ute around 30kms accidently in high gear. The ute sat unused for around 20 years or more up to that point. A few hours after getting it home we had it running.

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