concours
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- Dec 29, 2011
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Well, ANYONE could do it engine off, where's the challenge in that? 8)Matt Spencer said:The Engines NOT supposed to be running , while You Tap that out .:wink:
Well, ANYONE could do it engine off, where's the challenge in that? 8)Matt Spencer said:The Engines NOT supposed to be running , while You Tap that out .:wink:
Stillreel said:I'd check your con rod bearings. It will get louder if they are starting to fail. Once their gone, time for a crankshaft re-grind. $$$
kettle738 said:That huge tap is quite something, really interesting to see; I hope never to need to do that job but I'd really like to know how you manage to get the tap dead square to the exhaust port....do you fix up a guide?
Trying to do that just by eye looks like a recipe for frustration and disappointment, (unless you have carefully honed skills) I'm hoping I might learn something here.
Mick.
Yes, (big ass)shop vac with a hose taped in as a crevice tool. Final with compressed airBernhard said:If you have run the tap and discovered the metal flakes afterwards then it is not impossible it came from there. Don’t ask me how I know.
Did you blow the port out of all the metal swarf afterwards :?:
Bernhard said:If you have run the tap and discovered the metal flakes afterwards then it is not impossible it came from there. Don’t ask me how I know.
tyborg15 said:Hello,
I see that the tap is marked 1 15/16ths. Is this the standard thread for the exhausts? and is it BSF, UNF or some other strange beastie? A local machine shop is closing and there are a number of large taps that I can get my hands on for scrap metal value. I thought it might be handy if I ever have need to clean the threads.
regards
Tyborg
Stillreel said:I'd check your con rod bearings. It will get louder if they are starting to fail. Once their gone, time for a crankshaft re-grind. $$$
Dances with Shrapnel said:Bernhard said:If you have run the tap and discovered the metal flakes afterwards then it is not impossible it came from there. Don’t ask me how I know.
Well I must ask. How do you know?
Some plausible routes for a metal chip in this instance would be through an open valve cover, open tach drive or open timing chest while generating chips but through the cylinder?
Dances with Shrapnel said:Wow!
No chance the swarf did not somehow get into the motor through the open cam chain tunnel or pushrod tunnels. I am just struggling with seeing how relatively larger particles (swarf and chips and bits) can get past the rings.
Lessons learned indeed.