Re: High Mileage Packard V8s
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Home away from home
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Hudson ran a different design of oil pump than what was used in the Packard cars. Someone refresh my memmory, did the 56J use the SAME pump as used in the Packard cars????
Joe: Does the pump in your 56J have an OPEN pressure relief valve port or does it have a hex plug in it????? WHERE does your oil FILTER receive oil from???? Front of left head????? Does your 56J pump have a vacuum pump on it????? Does your 56J pump have a bushing in the LOWER PLATE???? How far above the top of the pump is the flex joint????? Are u SURE it is even a Packard pump??? Got a pic of the pump??? My 56 Executive had only 34K ORIGINAL miles on it when i got it and the shaft and bearing surface of the pump was worn .006 inch. My other very original Executive had 115K miles on it and the pump in it was also worn the same how ever i did not run that engine more than 5 minutes.
Posted on: 2007/6/2 20:59
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Re: High Mileage Packard V8s
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Keith -
Attached is a photographic illustration of the oil pump used in the '56 Golden Hawk - from the Studebaker Service Bulletin that recommended installation of the "sump tube". Notice that there is no vac pump on this version of the Packard V8 oil pump - just a flat bottom plate. While some Packard owners have spent good money to eliminate the vac pump in favor of a flat plate, clearly some 56 GH owners had the same complaint as PackardV8 owners or Studebaker would not have published this bulletin for the 56J. Seems to me that the vacumm pump was NOT at the root of the lifter noise and oiling issue. Attach file: (16.38 KB)
Posted on: 2007/6/3 10:44
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Re: High Mileage Packard V8s
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"Joe: Does the pump in your 56J have an OPEN pressure relief valve port or does it have a hex plug in it????? WHERE does your oil FILTER receive oil from???? Front of left head????? Does your 56J pump have a vacuum pump on it????? Does your 56J pump have a bushing in the LOWER PLATE???? How far above the top of the pump is the flex joint????? Are u SURE it is even a Packard pump??? Got a pic of the pump???"
56J pumps do not have the vacuum pump. As shown in the pic, it is replaced with a simple flat plate; there is no bushing in the plate. Also, the driveshaft flex joint location is identicle to Packard. All of the pumps I have saw have the pressure relief valve held in place by cotter pins. It is easy to make a 56J pump out of a Packard pump (just need to make a plate) but not so simple to make a Packard pump out of a 56J pump; need all the innards for the vacuum portion. When I ordered a pump from Max M, he mistakenly sent me a Packard pump. All I did was switch the plate out with the vacuum pump parts. Apparantly, it used to be possible to have 56J pumps rebuilt accross the counter. I have a pump that has "Rebuilt by..." stamped in indelible ink on the side of the body, but I can't make out the last words of the stamp. That pump has a slightly larger diameter driveshaft. So, it appears at least part of the rebuild was to drill out the worn shaft hole and install an oversize driveshaft. Joe H
Posted on: 2007/6/3 16:06
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Re: High Mileage Packard V8s
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Home away from home
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Packard and Studebaker used the same main oil pump body, AMC was completely different. AMC determined that the Packard/Studebaker pump was insufficient from the get-go, and designed their own oil pump to replace it. It's not much better than the Packard oil pump.
Keith, post a pic of the AMC pump that I gave you, the only other one I have is in my Patrician.
Posted on: 2007/6/3 16:12
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Re: High Mileage Packard V8s
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Brian. True, the vacuum pump in and of itself would not be the root cause of the lifter noise. HOWEVER, the vacuum pump places SIGNIFICANT additional load on the shaft thus causing faster wear. Of the three or four vacuum pump units i have witnessed the vacuum pump is rather ill fitting. The ill fitment contributes and even greater additional load on the shaft.
Posted on: 2007/6/3 21:36
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Re: High Mileage Packard V8s
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Well, I'm just thinking that if the lifter noise is connected to premature wear of the pump, then the vac pump isn't at the root of that problem - else there would have been no need to advise Studebaker dealers of the sump tube kit (effectiveness of that kit not withstanding).
Wouldn't the pump gears be self-centering, under pressure, and help keep the driving shaft squarely in its bore - at least until there is significant wear of the gears and separator plate? One problem might be that there never was a bushing for the driving shaft or - as you discovered - the Packard pump lacks an oiling channel for the driving shaft that the SBC pump has. If that channel had been there from day on, I bet the bore and shaft would have lasted a helluva lot longer - even with a sacrificial casting as it were. As for the additional load on the Packard V8 oil pump, the vacuum pump is quite similar to the vacuum motors that drive so many air tools - just works in reverse. As such, I'm having a hard time visualizing the additional load as a problem when the pump is merely pulling only inches of vacuum - unless it is binding internally. Perhaps we ought to put a few drops of air too oil down the vac pump's intake pipe on occasion. It's interesting to note that a 1957 Buick shop manual I have shows an oil pump with a vacuum pump riding piggyback, but that old Nailhead V8 never had the reputation for oiling issues that Packard V8 owners have had to endure. There's still a piece of the puzzle missing here that needs to be found. One of these days, I'm gonna have to get out to the Funny Farm and my dad's old Exec (which never had a lick of oiling problems or lifter noise) and yank the engine for some serious forensic work so we can all compare notes. Meanwhile, let's keep collecting data in this good thread.
Posted on: 2007/6/4 19:10
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