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Old 05-29-2002, 10:10 PM   #1
Big69C20 Toy
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Help! Keepers wont move

Hey guys i put pressure in the cylindar 120psi to keep the valves sealed, but when i compress the spring the whole valve just decides to go down despite the pressure. The keepers look marred up and i'm guessing they just dont wanna let it come loose.
Suggestions please? Do i have to pull the heads off ? If that's the case i'm thinking new heads anyways. Stupid PAW gave me the wrong size pushrods. Mine are like .300" is that normal? PAW gave me 3/8" pushrods so they dont fit in the guides at all.

Any help would be great cuz i'm workin on this thing as we speak... Thanks fellas
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Old 05-29-2002, 10:24 PM   #2
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Did you give the top of the spring a little tap sorta off center with a rubber/plastic hammer? There may be a bit of carbon build up.

Are your valves sealing good enough? Did the piston go back to the bottom when you aired it up? If so, put a breaker bar and socket on the front of the crank and strap it down. I have only done valves with the head off, but I have seen it done this way.

I have heard you can put the piston at TDC and then fill the cylender with rope to keep the valves from falling.

Good luck........
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Old 05-29-2002, 10:45 PM   #3
Big69C20 Toy
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ill try the tap with hammer thingy and valves are sealing well
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Now onto the 86 CUCV M1009; K5 blazer with 6.2L diesel, corp 10 bolt axles, Detroit locker in the rear, trutrac front, 3.73 gears, 35" tires.
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Old 05-29-2002, 11:11 PM   #4
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ill try the tap with hammer thingy and valves are sealing well
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Sold the 69 C20. It's off to a better home with more love!
Now onto the 86 CUCV M1009; K5 blazer with 6.2L diesel, corp 10 bolt axles, Detroit locker in the rear, trutrac front, 3.73 gears, 35" tires.
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Old 05-29-2002, 11:17 PM   #5
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you can put more than 120 in if the air compreesor wil alow it
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Old 05-29-2002, 11:21 PM   #6
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Arrow

Instead of using air pressure, I stuffed as much old clothesline as I could into the cylinder with the piston at TDC.

Compressed spring, removed keepers, replaced worn o-ring valve seals with umbrella seals. Cut oil consumption by a huge amount.
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Old 05-29-2002, 11:55 PM   #7
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Willy,
Wouldn't it be easier to pack the clothesline in with the piston toward BDC and then move it to TDC by turning the crank by hand? I jsut can't imagine trying to pack that rope in there with it at the top...
It does help to smack the top of the valve retainer to bust it loose.
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Old 05-30-2002, 01:52 AM   #8
O'l Buck
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smack 'em with a hammer, works every time.
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Old 05-30-2002, 02:11 AM   #9
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Hammer trick did it, put the wooden end of one on the cap and tapped it with another hammer, bingo no more sticking keepers.

got 2 cylindars done before 10pm. my ma and neighbors dont much care for our 5hp compressor buzzin away past taht time i dont think.
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Old 05-30-2002, 04:40 AM   #10
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a trick my auto mech. teacher showed us was take a large socket and hammer smack the spring on top of the retainer, the keepers should pop out, and you can't "love tap it" but then again this works best on a head that is off the motor, not cool to have keeper fall down a oil drain back hole.......
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Old 05-30-2002, 05:49 AM   #11
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Thanks for all the tips fellas, i love those ones that involve a bfh or somethin...
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Sold the 69 C20. It's off to a better home with more love!
Now onto the 86 CUCV M1009; K5 blazer with 6.2L diesel, corp 10 bolt axles, Detroit locker in the rear, trutrac front, 3.73 gears, 35" tires.
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Old 05-30-2002, 08:21 AM   #12
Willy Prost
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Using clothsline at TDC, I stuffed about a foot of line into the combustion chamber.

It's hard to tell how much actually went into the combustion chamber, I needed extra length coming out the spark plug hole to have something to pull the line out with hehehe.

I only needed enough line in the cylinder to keep the valves from dropping into the cylinder. Putting the piston at BDC would have taken ALOT more line.
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Old 05-30-2002, 10:13 AM   #13
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I understand now, Willy. You were just wanting to keep it from falling down too far. I was thinking you had to put pressure on the face of the valve when you removed the springs...
I was helping a friend do valve springs once and we were using air. Well, as luck would have it, the valve fell and it was the one where the piston was at BDC. Luckily it didn't fall all the way through and we were able to sneak it back up with the piston. Lucked out on that one.
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