Oh dear so I decided that I will sort the ticking lifter on my SBC, first thing was a quick engine flush and drain the oil which incidentally has been in the car for less than a thousand miles. Removed the sump plug and this is what I got
I think I will get the lifters out but I am guessing my CAM is not well
Range Rover 630R or otherwise known as the Money Pit
MS2 with switch MAPS for LPG
Techedge Wideband Sensor
A friend of mine had a tapping noise like a failed lifter in his 383. Turned out a roller had collapsed on a rocker. Cam was fine, new set of rockers from the States sorted a week later.
That does not look good mate.
Bear in mind that the magnetic plug is not in a recess at the bottom of the sump. So it can only catch what passes by that raised section?
It would be better to have a magnetic pad in the sump like you get on old overdrive units with an oblong flange that you can remove from the sump for inpsection.
Long story short!! Those shards look worrying to me.
Perry Stephenson
MGB GT + Rover V8
9.62 @ 137.37mph
Now looking for 8 seconds with a SBC engine
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVscbPHgue0&list=UUqIlXfSAoiZ--GyG4tfRrjw
That does not look good mate.
Bear in mind that the magnetic plug is not in a recess at the bottom of the sump. So it can only catch what passes by that raised section?
It would be better to have a magnetic pad in the sump like you get on old overdrive units with an oblong flange that you can remove from the sump for inpsection.
Long story short!! Those shards look worrying to me.
Perry Stephenson
MGB GT + Rover V8
9.62 @ 137.37mph
Now looking for 8 seconds with a SBC engine
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVscbPHgue0&list=UUqIlXfSAoiZ--GyG4tfRrjw
Oh bother more expense, guessed it would be, I took the lifters out from cylinders 2,4,6 & 8 which is the side the ticking was coming from and they are all OK nothing collapsed and all bearing surfaces were OK as well. I suspect the ticking is due to a lifter sticking and not pumping up fully so it will definitely get a set of those.
Going to take a cylinder head off as well to check bores etc but methinks the engine is in need of a refresh.
Anyone near Doncaster got an engine lift I can borrow?
JP yes I have seen that on many a gearbox drain plug but then I would expect a little swarf in a manual gearbox, it only takes one fluffed gear change to create a few filings like that.
Range Rover 630R or otherwise known as the Money Pit
MS2 with switch MAPS for LPG
Techedge Wideband Sensor
Funny you should ask as another well known user on here who I hope can do a rebuild for me has asked the same, I honestly don't know as I bought the car with the conversion already done but it appears that it may have given the condition of the drive gear.
Needless to say it wont have a high pressure pump when it gets rebuilt
Range Rover 630R or otherwise known as the Money Pit
MS2 with switch MAPS for LPG
Techedge Wideband Sensor
Spongo wrote:Needless to say it wont have a high pressure pump when it gets rebuilt
No reason why you should remove it, if fitted. All you need is a properly functional relief valve.
Check the relief valve first, it could well be the culprit.
Could be I guess, either way its engine out time and then decide how far to go with a refresh, hopefully just rings and bearings along with replacing the damaged items.
So have just bought an engine crane, looks like I am in for a few scraped knuckles over the next few days.
Range Rover 630R or otherwise known as the Money Pit
MS2 with switch MAPS for LPG
Techedge Wideband Sensor
Besides the damage to the dizzy cog, from the photo it looks like there is a lot of end play in the dizzy shaft.
1950 A40 Devon Hotrod with 5.0 twin turbo RV8.
EDIS8 wasted spark, Holley Injection.
Been as far as the Moon and back in 57 years of driving. Same Car, 5 engine upgrades !!!