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Thread: Help...2L engine backfire with flame and power loss

  1. #71
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    my 1960 hard copy agrees rover 56
    2002 defender 110 , 1955 86 inch

  2. #72
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    Thats good, doesn't answer the question though, does it?
    Terry
    80 109" 2.6 P ex Army GS, saved from the scrappie.
    95 300tdi 130 Single cab tray.
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  3. #73
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    no it dosent ,im taking 55 to 65psi as the setting untill someone comes up with a 1955 on manual for the new engine. and 35 to 45 psi for siameese 2L engines 1954 and back with canister oil filter on releif valve side.
    any one know what the 1600 engine was set at?
    2002 defender 110 , 1955 86 inch

  4. #74
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    Quote Originally Posted by mfc View Post
    any one know what the 1600 engine was set at?
    55 to 65 psi @ 30 mph in top gear, according to the "48/'58 manual.

    Be aware that the restricting bolt in the rocker shaft, will increase the pressure when you fit it,

    Cheers Charlie

  5. #75
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    Quote Originally Posted by chazza View Post
    55 to 65 psi @ 30 mph in top gear, according to the "48/'58 manual.

    Be aware that the restricting bolt in the rocker shaft, will increase the pressure when you fit it,

    Cheers Charlie
    theoretically, it should increase the oil flow to the bottom end if it is low and that may increase the oil pressure if it is low.

    but not increase the pressure if it is already good and if the relief valve is set correctly... 65psi should be the max i believe.
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  6. #76
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    yea i realy have to wait for the head oil line metering plug to arrive before i can be shure of the setting i have at the moment {just under 60 psi} less oil into the inlet rockers should stop the oil being sucked into the inlet via valves, the top end is literaly being flooded, up near if not over the valve guides...i put the new o rings down to the smoke being acceptable at the moment.
    2002 defender 110 , 1955 86 inch

  7. #77
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    That restrictor seems to be very important, because drainage down through the pushrod holes is a bit restricted.

    I was reminded of this some years ago when I fitted a positive ventilation valve in place of the rocker cover vent, which caused an upflow of air through the pushrod holes.

    First drive and I laid a smoke screen down the length of the main street, lost 2 litres of oil into the intake manifold.

    Terry
    80 109" 2.6 P ex Army GS, saved from the scrappie.
    95 300tdi 130 Single cab tray.
    2010 Guzzi 750

  8. #78
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    Quote Originally Posted by mfc View Post
    no it dosent ,im taking 55 to 65psi as the setting untill someone comes up with a 1955 on manual for the new engine. and 35 to 45 psi for siameese 2L engines 1954 and back with canister oil filter on releif valve side.
    any one know what the 1600 engine was set at?
    You are right. 1600 same as Siamese 2000. 40lb at 30 mph.
    From TP/138A March 1951 Page A18.
    Keith

  9. #79
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    manual 4220 1958

    A0-5

    2 litre motor

    55-65lb/sq.in @ 30mph


    1954/55 workshop manual TP165A

    A-10

    supplement 1

    1955 models @ 2000rpm 55-65lb/sq.in


    1955 Publication no. TP/171/C Part No. 4041

    Instruction Manual

    Oil Presure 55 to 65 lb./sq.in @ 30mph in top gear with warm engine
    2007 Discovery 3 SE7 TDV6 2.7
    2012 SZ Territory TX 2.7 TDCi

    "Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it." -- a warning from Adolf Hitler
    "If you don't have a sense of humour, you probably don't have any sense at all!" -- a wise observation by someone else
    'If everyone colludes in believing that war is the norm, nobody will recognize the imperative of peace." -- Anne Deveson
    “What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others.” - Pericles
    "We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.” – Ayn Rand
    "The happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts." Marcus Aurelius

  10. #80
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    Quote Originally Posted by incisor View Post
    theoretically, it should increase the oil flow to the bottom end if it is low and that may increase the oil pressure if it is low. Agreed

    but not increase the pressure if it is already good and if the relief valve is set correctly Why not?
    Pressure can be defined as a resistance to flow. If the pressure is "already good" with no metering-plug, then it will be increased when the oil has to be pushed through a restrictive hole, if the relief-valve remains unchanged.

    Whether the increase in pressure is measurable on the gauge, remains to be seen.

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