[AT] off topic, need help on new parts chasing truck.
Wrench50 at aol.com
Wrench50 at aol.com
Sat Jan 31 19:29:13 PST 2015
Cecil Not bad Its pretty straight forward Air ducts, linkage, fuel
lines,and wire harness,etc. Its not too heavy but hard for one person to handel.
Del in MI
In a message dated 1/31/2015 10:14:04 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
crbearden at copper.net writes:
Del:
How hard is that intake manifold to remove?
Cecil in OKla
On 1/31/2015 8:50 PM, Wrench50 at aol.com wrote:
> Cecil I have found that removing and installing that engine without the
> intake manifold installed makes the job much easyer.The way the engine
sits
> so far to the rear under the cowl makes it very difficult to work
on.Having
> done this I would never remove the cab to pull the engine. Just my
opinion.
> Del from MI
>
>
> In a message dated 1/31/2015 7:54:15 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
> crbearden at copper.net writes:
>
> I think the biggest problem with this engine is the crappy oil that was
> used in it. The oil is brown and stninks like Quaker State.. Old
> Quaker state. It was a drug recovery. I bought it because it was
white
> and non-descrip, and had more options than I would ever buy on a new one
> for myself. My biggest problem with tearing it down is that I need to
> spend about 2 weeks with some decent help to just get one bay of my shop
> cleaned out to get a truck in there. The shop has been the repository
> of every supply, etc since my Dad had his surgery that eventually killed
> him . I have a 30. 000 lb 30 ft long four post truck lift to put in
> there when it gets cleaned out. I hate to turn engineering work down,
> so I have 5 consulting projects that are in various stages of work. I
> also have to finish 3 years of expenses for my tax man. Not to mention
> finishing some repair on my house and getting my Dad's Double wide
> cleaned out and on the market. All the time keeping 200 acres of hay
> and the required machinery running, and taking care of 25 head of cows.
> I would just like to get something to drive for a while until I can
> get a few things caught up. I know that this economy will bust soon and
> I will have plenty of time. There are no reliable trustworthy
> mechanical oriented laborers available at a price I can afford. Shop
> time is over $100 per hour here.. I work outside a lot and really
> prefer it, however, OKlahoma has had more wind the last 5 years than it
> has had for the last 50. Right now we are getting the first good rain
> we have had in 3 months. I spread fertilizer on all the pastures and
> the wheat ground yesterday and finished at 5 pm. I will not complain
> about the rain. When I get to work on this truck, it probably will get
> another engine installed. However, the best way to do that is to remove
> the cab. (Ford's better idea) That will probably involve using the
> digger derrick truck or the trackhoe, or both in addition to the front
> end loader. Then again I may just find someone interested in the dam
> thing and let someone else have it for what I got in it and never again
> will I buy a drug seizure... I really thought it was a ex government
> truck. I have at least 7 of those in my "fleet" and they have served
> me very well. In 7 years this is only the 2nd time I have had a bad
> problem with a truck or tractor bought without seeing it up close.
> Every time I have went to look at one and bought it it turned to crap
> within 2 months...
>
> That is the reason I am so far behind.
>
> Cecil in oKla
>
>
>
> On 1/31/2015 1:59 PM, Indiana Robinson wrote:
>> On Sat, Jan 31, 2015 at 12:00 PM, Cecil R Bearden
<crbearden at copper.net>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Would it be possible to chuck the valve in a drill and spin it while
>>> trying to get marvel oil, Kroil, Gibbs, etc to lubricate it. I
really
>>> don't have the time and place right now to pull the head...
>>>
>>> Cecil in OKla
>>>
>>>
>> There are any number of possible ways to approach this cheaply and
> quickly.
>> If it is just sticking from crud (technical description) it is sticking
> at
>> the stem near the head. Very unlikely it is sticking at the spring/stem
>> end. I would try pulling the plug and spraying (take your pick) at the
> base
>> of the valve guide of both valves when they are open from jogging the
>> engine over. Put the plug back in but don't connect the wire yet. Start
> it
>> and run it a few seconds then shut it off and do the spray bit again.
> Then
>> after the second running, connect the plug wire and try it.
>> If that doesn't work my next move would be to pull the rocker cover
and
>> being sure that the piston was down press the valves down from the top
>> while spraying whatever up under the seals. You should be able to tell
> from
>> the top which valve is sticking and if one has a weak spring (or even a
>> broken one). If a spring is just weak try switching it out with one
from
> a
>> valve that is not sticking (being sure that neither valve drops).
>> :-)
>> It might buy you some time...
>> For what it is worth (flame shield up) I learned a very long time ago
to
>> not put a lot of credence in what a lot of "mechanics" "think" might be
>> wrong.
>>
>> My Farmall Super MTA was bought at a bargain price many years ago,
> knowing
>> that it had a "soft" knock that the dealers top mechanic was just
>> "positive" was a damaged timing gear. I bought it planning an engine
>> rebuild anyway so I wasn't too concerned. Funny thing... apparently a
>> damaged timing gear and a piston broken in half make the same sound
:-)
>> It made a great tractor, still is. Has the same high quality surface of
>> rust and thin paint it had when I found it.
>> :-)
>>
>>
>
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