Never remove your engine
#1
928 Collector
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Never remove your engine
Not only is it a huge job, but everything that can break, does, and not only that but you end up forgetting which way this and that hose route and having to re-do things once everything is bolted over it. like banjo bolts on steering rack hoses. ... plus worst of all, WIYT, you find 1000 other things that may as well be corrected replaced, fixed and improved.
#2
Rennlist Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Knoxville, Tn
Posts: 347
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
When I started my tb/wp job I also got into removing basically everything on top of the heads so I could have some parts powdercoated and replace the 25 year old gaskets and hoses. My digital camera came in very handy! I took pictures of everying. Especially each part as I was taking it off. When it comes back to putting everything back on (tb/wp is done, just waiting to get powdercoated parts back) the pictures will be worth a thousand words. And I won't have to waste the time of everyone on rennlist asking question about where the heck these parts go. But as far as breaking things, I guess theres not much that can be done about that.
#3
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Originally Posted by heinrich
... plus worst of all, WIYT, you find 1000 other things that may as well be corrected replaced, fixed and improved.
Rich
#7
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
I thought all you had to do was make sure the the pulleys side faced forward and the oil pan side was at the bottom...or was that the other way around
Trending Topics
#8
Rennlist Member
When I did my '82 I changed the whole unibody, and the way it went was that I pulled every single part off the old unibody, tagged them or put them in boxes which said where they were and what they did, and cataloged everything. Then, almost a year later I stated reassembly with the new unibody. I have been driving the car and tinkering on it for something like 15 years and I still have a big box of parts that I can't identify. Runs good though.
#10
928 Collector
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Erkka, Keithster, it's not that it's difficult. it's that you have to do it regularly to learn where everything goes. At that point it's no biggie but all the mistakes you have to undo, layered-over by swaybar; hoses; covers; alternator; etc etc .... that's the big deal.
#11
Range Master
Pepsie Lite
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Pepsie Lite
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
I bought a '60 corvette once. I had a blown engine. I got another engine and was all set to put it in. The car was far from imaculate, but it would have run and been registerable. IE I could have enjoyed it while I worked on it.......Buuuuuut Noooooooooooooooo.....I couldn't leave well enough alone. I HAD to take the body off and do a frame up restoration......I spent the better part of a couple years at it and ran out of money.....ended up selling it off to members of the local club that were able to take advantage of my being in too deep and not getting it road worthy......
I learned my lesson......never did that again.....No matter what you are gonna do to a car you really like, one project at a time.....just so you can enjoy it enough to remember why you put so much effort into it......
I learned my lesson......never did that again.....No matter what you are gonna do to a car you really like, one project at a time.....just so you can enjoy it enough to remember why you put so much effort into it......
#12
928 Collector
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
karl that is entirely credible. I can totally see that. Gretch, let's hope my already-15-month-project actually gets to hit the road soon. It's so close. You look at the engine and it's all there. Then you look more closely and you see oh, the steering knuckle is too close to that hose ... oh, the O2 sensor grommit isn't in; oh, the cooling flaps may as well come out; oh, the spoiler has to come off for that; oh, may as well replace the dead fuel hoses; oh, may as well reroute things and toss that stupid cooler; oh, may as well pull that silly windshield filler neck; oh, the wheel and fender liner have to come off for that and and and ...
#13
Nordschleife Master
Originally Posted by Gretch
I learned my lesson......never did that again.....No matter what you are gonna do to a car you really like, one project at a time.....just so you can enjoy it enough to remember why you put so much effort into it......
Really tempting during an engine job when another $50 or $100 here and there doesn't move the total price much. Until you look back and all the bits have added up. Factor in the risk of each change being a source of problems and you can easily end up in expensive, frustrating failure.
Let me add that as an engineering manager I fight these battles continuously. Better to have something that works than to have the perfect result planned and part-way executed. Of course, the engineers don't all think like that and that's why I'm the boss!
#14
928 Collector
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Glen you are correct. However, the job is so mammoth, it'd be like going after a faulty valve in a jet engine, and realising along the way that you should go with better-shaped blades, as well as newer alloy fuel lines and .....
#15
Now you understand H. Now, you understand.