[AT] Drawn out 1949 AC-B engine rebuild

Mogrits mogrits at gmail.com
Sat Mar 7 13:53:34 PST 2015


Okay, assuming your comment about making shims is not referring to emptying
beer cans, do I have to replace the main berings or is that just considered
good practice "since you're in there"? These are the kind of questions I
have. Do I drop the crankshaft and take it to a (who do I take it to?) to
have it checked and ground and trued if necessary? Or can I just unbolt the
rod bearings and remove the pistons and sleeves, install new and if so, do
I install new rod bearings and how do I know what size to use? I am
assuming re-using rod bearings is verbotten.

Warren

On Sat, Mar 7, 2015 at 4:37 PM, <Recentjester at aol.com> wrote:

> I have one engine three back halves need to get busy too on  rebuilding
> mine. My current excuse is making the rod and main bearing shims
>
>
> In a message dated 3/7/2015 3:34:10 P.M. Central Standard Time,
> mogrits at gmail.com writes:
>
> About 10  yrs ago my B became very hard to start and just as hard to keep
> running. A  compression test revealed...that it had almost none!
>
> So one weekend  while a cousin was visiting we tore down the tractor and
> engine and found  we could rock the pistons in the cylinders by hand.
> Obviously the pistons,  rings or sleeves or all the above were very worn. I
> bagged all the bolts  and photo-documented it all and still have all the
> parts neatly arranged  but have not touched it in that time. I need to get
> off my butt and get  that tractor back in the field.
>
> What are the lists recommendations as  to how to proceed? I purchased
> Spencers book on engine rebuilding and read  it years ago, but it is still
> outside my wheelhouse as to what is necessary  and what isn't. What do I
> check in the crank and what will need to be done  there based on those
> findings? Head/valve work while it's apart?
>
> I'm  asking for the kick in the pants that I've missed since George  Willer
> passed.
>
> (BTW, this tractor has no ignition issues as the  magneto was very
> professionally rebuilt by the now passed list  member/magneto whisperer
> whose name I can't recall) He was an extremely  kind and funny man. When he
> returned the rebuilt magneto he warned me not  to park the tractor outside
> as an errant breeze might move the tractor  enough to generate a  spark!
>
> Warren
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