DieselDobro
03-04-2012, 21:07
***Howdy!! Here is my question****
Has anyone ever had luck using a spray lubricant through the intake system to loosen and lesson the friction of an engine that has internal cylinder wall rust?
I bought this not running, an all stock '96 Chevy (built in 12/95) SRW K3500 with 220K after it set for two years (as of 8/11) from a bad PMD.
The guy I bought it from had the pump loose, ('96 cast 5288 pump), and was using starting fluid. It turned over really hard... After ruling out all the electrical symptoms I decided to tear into it...
Two broken 11G glow plugs and I thought I was going to be pulling the heads! I welded a nut on one and dealt with the disintegrated one by pulling the injector and cleaning the precombustion chamber with compressed air.
I didn't pull the heads, installed a recently rebuilt 5521 pump, new glow plugs, good used PMD, dual thermo housing and HO water pump. This truck is not one I am keeping and I am fixing it up to sell. Saving $$ is the prime motivator.
Got it all back together a few days ago, (2 1/2 years after it died), glow plugs cycling, turns over hard and getting harder. The previous owner rounded out some flexplate teeth with a bad starter and the starter labors when it meshes with that area of the ring gear. Not worried about that until I get it running, (or not), however.
Wishing now I had blown some PB Blaster into the intake ports of the heads before throwing the intake on.
I am getting smoke while turning it over and it has kicked a little (combustion). Oil pressure is going over 40 PSI. But the cranking speed is diminishing below the point I know the engine needs to detonate on the compression stroke.
My theory is rusted cylinder walls causing more friction from dry rings rubbing the rust off.
I am not pulling this engine apart in the truck or rebuilding it to put back in. I will do a swap with a running donor engine first for economic reasons. Obviously getting the existing power-plant running, as is will cost the least...
Any ideas or thoughts?
Thank you!!!!
Mark
Current owner of (5) 6.5 TD diesel trucks, been a 6.5 enthusiast and owner since 3/98
Has anyone ever had luck using a spray lubricant through the intake system to loosen and lesson the friction of an engine that has internal cylinder wall rust?
I bought this not running, an all stock '96 Chevy (built in 12/95) SRW K3500 with 220K after it set for two years (as of 8/11) from a bad PMD.
The guy I bought it from had the pump loose, ('96 cast 5288 pump), and was using starting fluid. It turned over really hard... After ruling out all the electrical symptoms I decided to tear into it...
Two broken 11G glow plugs and I thought I was going to be pulling the heads! I welded a nut on one and dealt with the disintegrated one by pulling the injector and cleaning the precombustion chamber with compressed air.
I didn't pull the heads, installed a recently rebuilt 5521 pump, new glow plugs, good used PMD, dual thermo housing and HO water pump. This truck is not one I am keeping and I am fixing it up to sell. Saving $$ is the prime motivator.
Got it all back together a few days ago, (2 1/2 years after it died), glow plugs cycling, turns over hard and getting harder. The previous owner rounded out some flexplate teeth with a bad starter and the starter labors when it meshes with that area of the ring gear. Not worried about that until I get it running, (or not), however.
Wishing now I had blown some PB Blaster into the intake ports of the heads before throwing the intake on.
I am getting smoke while turning it over and it has kicked a little (combustion). Oil pressure is going over 40 PSI. But the cranking speed is diminishing below the point I know the engine needs to detonate on the compression stroke.
My theory is rusted cylinder walls causing more friction from dry rings rubbing the rust off.
I am not pulling this engine apart in the truck or rebuilding it to put back in. I will do a swap with a running donor engine first for economic reasons. Obviously getting the existing power-plant running, as is will cost the least...
Any ideas or thoughts?
Thank you!!!!
Mark
Current owner of (5) 6.5 TD diesel trucks, been a 6.5 enthusiast and owner since 3/98