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oil leak question



 
 
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  #11  
Old November 18th 04, 04:06 AM
Morgans
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"Nathan Young" wrote


If it is thin enough to bend with visegrips, could you cut it with a
set of large bolt cutters?Or, is there enough room to rotate one of those

little pipe cutters. No residue at all, from that.
--
Jim in NC


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  #12  
Old November 18th 04, 04:51 AM
Bela P. Havasreti
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On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 00:02:17 GMT, Nathan Young
wrote:

On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 23:19:08 GMT, Bela P. Havasreti
wrote:

On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 17:36:03 -0500, "Morgans"
wrote:


"Jim Weir" wrote in message
...
PLEASE don't do it this way. Remove them the old-fashioned way. Cut that
tube
off with a saw and I guarantee you chips in the oil pan. Not good.


Jim

Couldn't one push a piece of cloth rolled in a ball down the tube, past
where it is to be cut, and contain the shavings?

Don't jump me, it is just an idea; wondering if it would work.


I'll see if I can find the original instructions, but I think that's
how they suggest you do it. If I find the instructions, I'll
post back what it says.

What I did is use vise grips to collapse the tube near the outer
end (where it enters the rocker arm area). The metal is fairly
soft, and easy to deform. A small cut-off wheel on a Dremel
makes quick work out of cutting the tube in two at about the
same location.

There are no metal chips scattered anywhere with this method, just
a small amount of residual aluminum and abrasive wheel dust
associated with the cutting process.


If it is thin enough to bend with visegrips, could you cut it with a
set of large bolt cutters?


I bet you could. I want to say it's maybe .025 wall, no thicker than
..032, so if you squish it flat, you'd be cutting through maybe an .062
thickness of aluminum.

I might add that it's way easier to remove the original pushrod tubes
and install this kit with the exhaust removed (I had mine off for
rebuild anyway).

Bela P. Havasreti
  #13  
Old November 18th 04, 05:28 AM
Bela P. Havasreti
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On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 23:06:41 -0500, "Morgans"
wrote:


"Nathan Young" wrote


If it is thin enough to bend with visegrips, could you cut it with a
set of large bolt cutters?Or, is there enough room to rotate one of those

little pipe cutters. No residue at all, from that.


No room for a small pipe cutter I'm afraid....

Here's what the instructions say (I don't feel like typing the whole
thing in, so I'll only quote the pertinent part):

"Hacksaw cut the pushrod tube about 2 inches down from the
cylinder head. Remove the piece left in the lifter cover. Now remove
the other piece in the cylinder end by wiggling and pulling towards
the crankcase. Clean and dry the area at the cylinder & case
position".

I would think hacksawing would create at least as much aluminum
"chips" (or dust or whatever) as a cut-off wheel....

FWIW, the only way you'll get a hack saw in there (especially if
you're doing the center cylinders on a 6-cyl Continental) is by
pulling the exhaust.

In any event, I like the idea of stuffing a rag or whatever down the
tube prior to cutting it in half. I also like the idea of using some
bolt cutters after the tube is flattened. I think I'll do it the
latter way next time (when the next pushrod tube starts to leak!).

Bela P. Havasreti
  #14  
Old November 18th 04, 12:28 PM
Ron Natalie
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Morgans wrote:

Couldn't one push a piece of cloth rolled in a ball down the tube, past
where it is to be cut, and contain the shavings?

Don't jump me, it is just an idea; wondering if it would work.


Umm...how would you do that? If you could get INSIDE the tube, you
have done all the necessary work to remove it and do it properly.
The "dremel" manouver is to shorten the tube while it is in place.
\
  #15  
Old November 18th 04, 04:34 PM
Bela P. Havasreti
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On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 07:28:36 -0500, Ron Natalie
wrote:

Morgans wrote:

Couldn't one push a piece of cloth rolled in a ball down the tube, past
where it is to be cut, and contain the shavings?

Don't jump me, it is just an idea; wondering if it would work.


Umm...how would you do that? If you could get INSIDE the tube, you
have done all the necessary work to remove it and do it properly.
The "dremel" manouver is to shorten the tube while it is in place.
\


Take the rocker cover off, pull the rocker arm(s) off, pull the
pushrod(s) out, stuff a piece of rag down into the tube(s) and
cut the tube(s) in half.

Bela P. Havasreti
  #16  
Old November 18th 04, 10:43 PM
Blueskies
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"Bela P. Havasreti" wrote in message ...
On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 07:28:36 -0500, Ron Natalie
wrote:

Morgans wrote:

Couldn't one push a piece of cloth rolled in a ball down the tube, past
where it is to be cut, and contain the shavings?

Don't jump me, it is just an idea; wondering if it would work.


Umm...how would you do that? If you could get INSIDE the tube, you
have done all the necessary work to remove it and do it properly.
The "dremel" manouver is to shorten the tube while it is in place.
\


Take the rocker cover off, pull the rocker arm(s) off, pull the
pushrod(s) out, stuff a piece of rag down into the tube(s) and
cut the tube(s) in half.

Bela P. Havasreti


Another old trick is to use grease...


  #17  
Old November 19th 04, 01:59 AM
Dan Thomas
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Bela P. Havasreti wrote in message ...
On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 07:28:36 -0500, Ron Natalie
wrote:

Morgans wrote:

Couldn't one push a piece of cloth rolled in a ball down the tube, past
where it is to be cut, and contain the shavings?

Don't jump me, it is just an idea; wondering if it would work.


Umm...how would you do that? If you could get INSIDE the tube, you
have done all the necessary work to remove it and do it properly.
The "dremel" manouver is to shorten the tube while it is in place.
\


Take the rocker cover off, pull the rocker arm(s) off, pull the
pushrod(s) out, stuff a piece of rag down into the tube(s) and
cut the tube(s) in half.

Bela P. Havasreti


I have sealed the leaks at the outer end of these tubes by removing
only the rocker cover, squirting some strong thinner (like laquer
thinner or brake cleaner) into the joint, and blowing it out with
compressed air. Several applications like this gets all the oil out,
then a wicking-type threadlocker like Loctite 290 will go in there
nicely and harden up after a bit. No more leaks at all. Don't let
Loctite get into anything other than the joint, though.
The inner ends of the tubes may need those boots replaced. The
cylinder base nuts have to come off and the cylinder backed off a bit
to get the boots in, but then the cylinder base seal should be
replaced too and that requires the jug to come right off.

Dan
  #18  
Old November 19th 04, 01:18 PM
Dick
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Exactly the trick I was looking for inside the cover. Thanks.

Thinking to replace those lower pushrod tube spring clips with S.S. hose
clamps.. Thoughts?

Dick

I have sealed the leaks at the outer end of these tubes by removing
only the rocker cover, squirting some strong thinner (like laquer
thinner or brake cleaner) into the joint, and blowing it out with
compressed air. Several applications like this gets all the oil out,
then a wicking-type threadlocker like Loctite 290 will go in there
nicely and harden up after a bit. No more leaks at all. Don't let
Loctite get into anything other than the joint, though.
The inner ends of the tubes may need those boots replaced. The
cylinder base nuts have to come off and the cylinder backed off a bit
to get the boots in, but then the cylinder base seal should be
replaced too and that requires the jug to come right off.

Dan



  #19  
Old November 19th 04, 03:14 PM
jls
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"Dick" wrote in message
. com...
Exactly the trick I was looking for inside the cover. Thanks.

Thinking to replace those lower pushrod tube spring clips with S.S. hose
clamps.. Thoughts?

Dick

Look at a Continental Engine Manual, Dick. SS Hose clamps won't fit.

Those spring clamps are designed for the purpose and work well in my
experience as long as they are properly seated in the grooves of the
synthetic rubber boots, with one inner clamp compressing the boot on the
crankcase boss tube and one outer clamp compressing the boot on the pushrod
tube. Of course the boots must be properly seated too on the pushrod tube
bosses (also called pushrod housing flanges) and the pushrod tubes. You
have to fight, grunt, and cuss to get them on properly and then use a
telescoping mirror and strong flashlight to assure they are seated properly.
You have to look at them from side to side and bottom to top, because both
the boots and the clamps WILL do their damnedest to come off their seats if
they can. Push from outside inward instead of from inside outward. Hell,
use a heat gun to warm them up a little, but not enough to burn
them.(Sometimes you will bust your knuckles and cuss.) Squirt them with a
good lube like LPS-1 to make the seating easier. An oil leak can be stopped
by rotating or staggering the clamps as long as the boot has not been
ruined. You need a proper pair of spring clamp pliers -- Snap-on or
Craftsman --- to loosen and move the clamps.

This is no work for the faint of heart or pink-fingered. When the clamps
and boots are on right you won't find any oil leaks around them. I have
rebuilt a few engines and have complete faith in them. I just examined two
O-300 engines recently rebuilt and both of them are dry around the pushrod
tubes on both ends. Sometimes you will have leaks around the cylinder base
nuts or cylinder base flanges, but that's something to correct at rebuild
time--- and the subject of another essay with a cussword or two for
mechanics who have damaged the crankcase by slapping the connecting rods
around the cylinder parting bosses.

If you don't have palnuts on those cylinder base nuts, I suggest you put
them on for your safety. The record is full of those nuts coming off,
despite being torqued to specs. And I can tell you that when a jug comes
loose the results are often deadly.


 




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