Re: low compression, no oil pressure
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Home away from home
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It's very unlikely that reassembling used pistons and rings in an old engine will give satisfactory results.Re-assembling used inserts usually doesn't pan out either. Mixing old lifters on an old cam may give trouble. (Or not) If you can get oil some oil pressure, running the engine may get better ring action after some run time. If you have to adjust the lifters cold, adding two to three thousandths clearance to the spec should assure that the valves can seat with the engine warm.
Posted on: 10/13 19:47
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Re: low compression, no oil pressure
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Home away from home
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On your oil issue - you could pull one of the galley plugs, or just use where your oil pressure gauge taps off, and force feed oil using a pressure pot. You could even do this on the stand, with the oil pan and valve covers off, to inspect the oil flow at each critical point.
Summit Racing and Jegs both sell pressure pots; I'm sure others do as well. You essentially just pressurize a can of oil with shop air and use that to force feed the engine, bypassing the oil pump entirely.
Posted on: 10/19 8:23
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1937 120 1092 - Original survivor for driving and continued preservation. Project blog / Registry
1937 115 1082 - Total basket case, partial restoration, sold Hershey 2015 Project blog / Registry |
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Re: low compression, no oil pressure
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Home away from home
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Thanks--with the compression issue plus the oil pressure concern, that engine has been buttoned up for the winter in the car, and the engine that I pulled out of it in the first place is now on the engine stand.
Steam cleaning it today, and I'll tear into that one starting tomorrow. I know that it has (at least!) several stuck valves among other offenses. The car is now outside and under a car cover perhaps for a few weeks. A few other projects need to be done as long as the '40's outside the shop.
Posted on: 10/19 17:04
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Re: low compression, no oil pressure
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The subject engine was mostly assembled when I picked it up in 2019, so I'd thought that it had (at least) had rings--one rod bearing cap was off the engine, the bearings were all checked with plastigage and were within spec; the crank had been turned, inserts were not original. I did not pull the pistons, as they were clean (not new) and the cylinders cross hatched. Innards of the engine were perfectly clean. I did not check any of the galley plugs though.
Today, I taped up the head to keep critters out of the nice, shiny Packard-green engine,(manifold is off) reinserted the new plugs, and pushed her out in the field for at least a few weeks (if not all winter). Covered her over with a couple of car covers and strapped them down. Then took the skidsteer, happily equipped with pallet forks, grabbed the engine that I removed from the '40, put that on the engine stand, and started tearing her down. Significant amount of sludge in the valve area; haven't pulled the pan yet but I'm expecting about the same amount of crap that I had in my **other** 245, meaning, a ****whole lot****. The 245 engine that was in the '40 when I bought it in 1989 turned out to be from 1947. I bought another running, good compression 1947 245 a couple of years ago(saw a video of it running, saw a compression check, good vacuum). Paid $500, opened it up and it was a sludge fest, the entire valve gallery was nearly one big block of crud, the pan had 3/4" of crap in it and had rusted through, the crud sealed up the holes though. Used it for parts for the 245 that was part of the package deal for my '37 115c (that still has it's original engine). Turns out the '47 engines were made about a month apart, if serial numbers are to be believed. Another mechanical adventure awaits. Oh, joy. Anyone need a '47 Clipper Six 3 speed? (My '40 has an OD, so I don't need it). Free to a good home....
Posted on: 10/19 20:56
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Re: low compression, no oil pressure
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Your oil pump has lost its prime, or it was assembled dry and cannot draw a vacuum sufficient to pull the oil up from the pan.
Take the cover off and smear the gears generously with heavy gear oil or STP. Check that your cover gasket is very thin, about .005 at the most. Some of the older gasket sets had very thick gaskets which caused a lot of oil to bypass around the ends of the gears. I have made those gaskets from standard notebook paper with good results.
Posted on: 10/19 21:53
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