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04-25-2023, 10:37 PM | #26 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: TN.
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
Quote:
Probably instantly because of the extra wear of tapping it down. If you do not Remove the head there will be metal shavings involved. Which will not end with good results. If you try to do a roll pin thing. Which will be a Temporary fix.???? Also, If you drill and tap these need to be drilled at the Proper angle. For screw in studs. The geometry is what keeps these from wearing out before their time. With my opinion stated. Would you feel comfortable driving it down the road like this? If it was Patched up. If it were mine . Screw in studs in your current heads done by a Good machine shop . Or buy a new set of Heads. JMHO Hope this helps. I have had a set of heads that had this issue. They were replaced.
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04-26-2023, 03:30 AM | #27 | |
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Location: Falls City, Nebraska "100 Miles From Nowhere"
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
Quote:
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Michael of the clan Hill, "Two Seventy Two's" 71 1-ton Dually 350 4-Speed 71 C/50 Grain Truck, 350 Split-Axle 4-Speed 02 3/4 ton Express 14 Indian Chief Vintage 1952 Ford 8N, "Only Ford Allowed On The Property" "Be American, Buy American" Last edited by Ironangel; 04-26-2023 at 03:39 AM. |
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04-26-2023, 10:10 AM | #28 |
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Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Cumming, GA
Posts: 483
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
Thanks Iron, that matches my own research and I think I'm comfortable attempting it since I don't have to bore a larger hole - its just tapping an existing hole.
My one question is, at the bottom of the hole is it open, meaning metal shavings will fall through, or is it closed? I've read its both, I think that depends on what heads you have. I have basic iron heads. Knowing that jig exists is a big help, I have a fighting chance of not screwing it up. Ryan |
04-26-2023, 10:38 AM | #29 |
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Join Date: Apr 2022
Location: Moorpark, CA
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
You will see if its a blind hole when you pull the stud. The tap looks to be a "bottoming tap" which would be the kind you use on a blind hole.
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04-26-2023, 12:06 PM | #30 |
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Location: Bowser
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
Despite all the awesome advice you’ve gotten, I’d leave the stud alone. Put it back togethor and see if it runs quietly. If it does then look into fixing the stud. If not then you’ll need to dig deeper.
Could be a bad lifter or the dreaded flat lobe. Also your video shows a distinct lack of oil on the rockers. Should be little pools of oil around each rocker ball. |
04-26-2023, 12:31 PM | #31 | |
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Location: Falls City, Nebraska "100 Miles From Nowhere"
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
Quote:
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Michael of the clan Hill, "Two Seventy Two's" 71 1-ton Dually 350 4-Speed 71 C/50 Grain Truck, 350 Split-Axle 4-Speed 02 3/4 ton Express 14 Indian Chief Vintage 1952 Ford 8N, "Only Ford Allowed On The Property" "Be American, Buy American" |
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04-29-2023, 10:35 AM | #32 |
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Northern Arkansas
Posts: 1,142
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
I had that happen years ago on a 305. I used flat steel across the other rocker arms to pull the stud maybe 1'2" out, put a few light grroves into it with a hacksaw blade, smeared red loctite on it, then hammered it back down, then I dimpled the boss a couple times with a punch. Maybe a few hundred miles later I THOUGHT the same thing happened again and I would have to pull the head........NOPE, flat lobes on the cam which I believe started the whole thing in the first place. Stud was still in place though LOL!
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05-06-2023, 04:36 PM | #33 |
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Location: Cumming, GA
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
Update: I successfully pulled out the press-in stud, tapped the hole, installed a new screw-in stud, and put everything back together, with valves adjusted.
I'm giving the Loctite time to fully cure before I run the engine. More detail: * The tool above helped with extracting the press-in stud but I needed to add several washers to pull it all the way out. * Using the tool above, tapping threads into the hole was not difficult or risky. Without that tool it would have been tricky to do this with the head still in the engine because its hard to reach and at an angle. But the jig in the tool above made it impossible to get it misaligned. * I used grease on the tap and Q-tips to remove all the shavings. * I had to remove rockers from 3 adjacent valves to get the tap to screw in deep enough. * I used these taps: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00FXJWFZ6/ * And this tap wrench: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00062BNOO/ * I did have to rotate the distributor to get the vacuum advance out of the way of the tap wrench, so I'll need to adjust the timing. As always, thank you all for your help. |
05-08-2023, 10:35 PM | #34 |
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Location: Queen Creek, AZ
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Re: Does this engine sound healthy?
GREAT! thx for the follow up!
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