FEF
11-15-2007, 18:09
I've seen about a dozen 6.2s in Burbs and trucks. Many were clearly not running well at all. However, I ran into something that has me reconsidering what I thought I wanted.
I've found a '88 Burb, with 335,000 on the OD. The rig is Canadian, the gauges are metric. KPH, mPi, C for the temp, ect. That's a bit over 200k miles.
This is the best looking one I've seen. The engine bay is clean, and even has the stock bottle jack. I saw it fire up cold. There was slight (the least I've seen of all the engines) puffing coming out of the dipstick (when pulled out), no pressure felt from the oil fill tube, and no noticable oil vapors coming from the EGR (I think it's the EGR), into the intake. All the others has a steady stream of oil fumes going into the intake.
It ran well. Very well, indeed. The only sign it was an older engine was the thick layer of carbon goo on the walls of the intake.
The questions are:
- I understand these engines have seen 400k miles. This one sounds like a keeper to me. Have I noted any red flags?
- I know how to get carbon from the chamber, but I've got no idea how to clean the intake walls, other then with a rag and wires, and a shopvac. Anyone have any clever ways to ge the inside of the intake clean?
Sure, I understand buying anything used has risks, but this one, other then higher miles, appears to be pretty OK. It looks like a VERY good doner for my Revcon diesel swap.
Any thoughts?
I've found a '88 Burb, with 335,000 on the OD. The rig is Canadian, the gauges are metric. KPH, mPi, C for the temp, ect. That's a bit over 200k miles.
This is the best looking one I've seen. The engine bay is clean, and even has the stock bottle jack. I saw it fire up cold. There was slight (the least I've seen of all the engines) puffing coming out of the dipstick (when pulled out), no pressure felt from the oil fill tube, and no noticable oil vapors coming from the EGR (I think it's the EGR), into the intake. All the others has a steady stream of oil fumes going into the intake.
It ran well. Very well, indeed. The only sign it was an older engine was the thick layer of carbon goo on the walls of the intake.
The questions are:
- I understand these engines have seen 400k miles. This one sounds like a keeper to me. Have I noted any red flags?
- I know how to get carbon from the chamber, but I've got no idea how to clean the intake walls, other then with a rag and wires, and a shopvac. Anyone have any clever ways to ge the inside of the intake clean?
Sure, I understand buying anything used has risks, but this one, other then higher miles, appears to be pretty OK. It looks like a VERY good doner for my Revcon diesel swap.
Any thoughts?