We tried the Vaseline thing on the GT40 and it did not work
About 3 tubs of vaseline later and I bought a priming tool from Real Steel (About £12 if I remember including post)
We drained the oil soon thereafter and certainly that much vaseline showed in the oil.
20 seconds on the drill and it was primed - yes you have to remove the distributor to get the tool in but if you mark the position first you should not have to retime (but hecking it afterwords is always good)
Ian
Oil leak, hopfully not a daft question
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A bloke in the GT40 club came over to try and bleed / prime the GT40 Rover mill
He used to rae an MGB 8 and so knew the system inside out.
He had an oil can (squirty one) full of 20w50 and attached a piece of plastic pipe like from a Fish tank /windscreen washer and had a short length of brake pipe in the other end.
Unscrewed the oil pressure guage sender and stuffed the brale pipe and plastic into the hole. Pumped for 2 - 3 minutes and we got prressure (oil pressure light as still connected and went out when pumping the oil can.
He said at this stage he would normally remove the plastic pipe and refit the oil pressure sender and then crank over (no spark) to make sure he had oil pressure then rconnected the ocoil and fired it up. (pn mine we never got pressure on cranking on the starter.
So yes you can backfill and it may work - always check though that you have oil pressure on cranking before adding the spark.
so many ways to skin a cat!
Ian
He used to rae an MGB 8 and so knew the system inside out.
He had an oil can (squirty one) full of 20w50 and attached a piece of plastic pipe like from a Fish tank /windscreen washer and had a short length of brake pipe in the other end.
Unscrewed the oil pressure guage sender and stuffed the brale pipe and plastic into the hole. Pumped for 2 - 3 minutes and we got prressure (oil pressure light as still connected and went out when pumping the oil can.
He said at this stage he would normally remove the plastic pipe and refit the oil pressure sender and then crank over (no spark) to make sure he had oil pressure then rconnected the ocoil and fired it up. (pn mine we never got pressure on cranking on the starter.
So yes you can backfill and it may work - always check though that you have oil pressure on cranking before adding the spark.
so many ways to skin a cat!
Ian
Owner of an "On the Road" GT40 Replica by DAX powered by 3.9Hotwre Efi, worked over by DJ Motors. EFi Working but still does some kangaroo at low revs (Damn the speed limits) In to paint shop 18/03/08.
It shouldn't be necessary on a newish motor. I don't pack mine with vaseline every time I start the car, and that has plenty of time (sometimes more than a month) to drain all the oil away.leylandracer wrote:Just got back from my holsand its time to put the new oil pump base/cover on
, Just to be certain
is it best to pack the pump gears with vasoline
Does it mix well with oil
Its just that iv spoken to a few mechanics whist iv been waiting for the parts and none of them have heard about packing the oil pump? wouldnt pouring some oil through the oil pressure port on the pump have the same affect on priming? Just nervous not wanting to wreck the engine
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Any ideas what the tourqe settings are on the oil pump base bolts, Thanks
First time I started it after having the pump off I used an oil can to squirt a load of oil in one of the pump ports, shoved the blanking plug in, then fired up the motor, oil pressure no problem.
The pump is basically above the oil level, so if it is worn and dry it can not make enough suction to prime itself. A new pump, or one you've wetted with an oil can, should have no such problem.
The RV8 pump is not designed to self prime. If you're lucky, maybe it will but there's no guarantee & it ain't worth the risk of a blown engine.
Seems like different peopple have found different ways to make it work & I don't think it matters what method you use as long as you make sure it's primed before running the motor for more than a few seconds.
Spinning up the pump with the priming tool is an easy & fool proof way to check as you can see the pressure light go out without starting the motor; if you can find another way that's better for you, that's good too.
Seems like different peopple have found different ways to make it work & I don't think it matters what method you use as long as you make sure it's primed before running the motor for more than a few seconds.
Spinning up the pump with the priming tool is an easy & fool proof way to check as you can see the pressure light go out without starting the motor; if you can find another way that's better for you, that's good too.
Sondar