Re: Frozen piston
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Home away from home
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Sometimes in that situation, only a BFH (sledge hammer type) and BFP (steel punch) will get it out. In other words, you have to break up the aluminum piston to get it out. Try not to bang the cylinder wall, although the rust has probably messed it up pretty good already.
Of course, a cutting torch or cut-off wheel is an alternative. Also, get it out through the top of the cylinder, not the bottom. Craig
Posted on: 2010/9/13 11:21
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Nuke them from orbit, it's the only way to be sure! Ellen Ripley "Aliens"
Time flies like an arrow. Frui |
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Re: Frozen piston
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Home away from home
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Thanks Craig. I'm going to give it until this weekend and then start really beating on it.
Posted on: 2010/9/13 11:37
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Re: Frozen piston
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Webmaster
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Pour a mixture of ATF/diesel on it and let it sit for a couple of days. It may penetrate enough to loosen up the rust and let the piston break free. I would let this sit outside away from the house since it is a flammable mixture.
Posted on: 2010/9/13 13:00
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-BigKev
1954 Packard Clipper Deluxe Touring Sedan -> Registry | Project Blog 1937 Packard 115-C Convertible Coupe -> Registry | Project Blog |
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Re: Frozen piston
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Forum Ambassador
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Kev, we'll make a chemist out of you yet. Combustible, not flammable.
Posted on: 2010/9/13 14:00
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Re: Frozen piston
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Home away from home
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Take it to a shop that has a chemical tank for cleaning engines, most of those cleaners will eat away anything non-ferrous, leaving only the cast and steel parts.
Posted on: 2010/9/13 14:09
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Re: Frozen piston
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Home away from home
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THis is something that should be done BEFORE the engine is dissassembled.
Put hte head on with the old gasket. Put the crank back in. No need to torque the crank real tite. Pour in some snake oil. Place 100 -150 PSI air pressure into the cylinder thru the spark plug hole. Keep the pressure on it for about 2 or 3 days it will break loose. The OEM V8 pistons are rare as hens teeth. Try to save it. Use the compressed air trick outlined above. Works everytime for me.
Posted on: 2010/9/13 15:20
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VAPOR LOCK demystified: See paragraph SEVEN of PMCC documentaion as listed in post #11 of the following thread:f
packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=7245 |
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Re: Frozen piston
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Home away from home
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There is another method that has been used with success on much older engines than yours.
Make a plate to bolt on the top of the cylinder. Drill a hole and put in a grease fitting. Fill the cylinder with oil or grease, bolt on the plate, and start pumping it full of grease from a grease gun. This will provide up to 3000 PSI of hydraulic pressure. Enough to push out any piston without damage. Basically the same as the air pressure trick but more powerful. Try the air pressure first, if that does not work try the hydraulic pressure.
Posted on: 2010/9/13 16:20
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Re: Frozen piston
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Home away from home
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The problem with the pneumatic or hydraulic method is that it will not remove all pistons on all cylinders. On a Packard V-8 block, only #1 & #8 cylinders are completely open on the bottom. The other six are squeezed in on one side by the main webs. You need to remove those out of the top.
I like Eric's method (chemical tank) as a step before my brute force method. But, because of EPA rules, many automotive machine shops have gone to the furnace method of removing old rust/sludge/etc. Craig
Posted on: 2010/9/13 16:43
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Nuke them from orbit, it's the only way to be sure! Ellen Ripley "Aliens"
Time flies like an arrow. Frui |
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Re: Frozen piston
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Home away from home
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It's been my experience that forcing a stuck piston down like the methods described here virtually ensures cylinder scoring from stuck rings.
Gentle persuasion and finesse wins over brute force every time.
Posted on: 2010/9/13 19:08
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