Sunday, April 12, 2009

Mabel Gets Undressed

Friday night Doug and I dove in down and dirty. We dropped the steering drag link and removed the oil pan. We used a cheap kiddie pool for a catch basin, and proceded to do some serious desludging. We scraped and wiped all the crud from the pushrod gallery, then put the solvent right to it. We pulled the heads, but left the lifters in place as we didn't want crud washing down on the cam. Our goal at this time is to leave the block in place, but that is subject to change as measurements and inspections continue.












We also removed the Fan and the water pump. Pulled the starter, and the fuel pump as well. We know that aspiration and ventilation in this engine was a problem. But we believe that the engine mechanicals are strong, after all we did have it running and she gave us a pretty decent set of compression readings. We are not really going for the "engine overhaul" at this time. We are just disassembling and cleaning. We havent found any reasons yet for major parts replacement or machine shop work. A top end gasket and seal set was only $50 and on the shelf at NAPA


The starter, water pump, fuel pump, heads, and oil pn all came back to Bellingham with me for a good cleaning and a paint job. We do plan on a valve inspection soon. After a good soaking in a lye bath. It might be wishful thinking but the plan now is to hand lap the valves and replace the seals. This engine does not have replaceable valve guides. We might have to get the valve stems knurled, but won't know until we get the valves out.



Sludge is coming off in layers. When we removed the cooling water drain plugs from the block nothing came out. We blew compressed air back up in the holes and it wasn't pretty. Doug didn't think it tasted very good either. We used a lot of brake cleaner solvent spray cans and the kiddie pool is ugly!













I saturated everything with WD-40 and will let that soak for a while. The cylinders looked pretty good at the first glance. The piston crowns appear in good shape. Doug got one of the hydraulic lifters apart and it too looks to be re-usable. We have a tremendous amout of tedious cleaning to do, as our mission is to reuse everything we can and keep the cost down. Nice Jugs huh

Thursday, April 2, 2009

What's new with the engine?

Not much. In fact most of it's pretty damned old. There's gunk on/in that block that's probably twice my age. Lots of it... and it's thick and nasty. The deeper we dig into this car, the more we are coming to realize that it is a living testament to the quality of old school American engineering. I've lost count of how many times I've stopped, looked, and thought "Damn... all that and it still runs."

We've been busy up in the engine compartment. A previous post mentioned that the carb had come off, and it's now disassembled and mostly clean. Turns out the shaft that hold the choke valve and connects it to all the linkages that control choke was busted beyond repair, which might have been a deal killer for that carburetor. Dad managed some pretty impressive networking though, and found a shop in Mount Vernon run by Terry, who's an expert on these things. We paid Terry a visit last week and ended up buying a beat up top end off a similar carb from him for $20. It just happened to have a shaft of the right length, with the right cuts in it, and dad was able to drill and tap the necessary holes in the end to attach us to all the linkages. So my friends, it looks like we're keeping our carb. :)

In other news outside the block, a closer look at the radiator revealed it to be in rough shape. Still holding most of it's fluid, but leaky, and definitely looking shaky on the inside (read: thick brown sludge on everything.) We yanked it out last weekend, and it's now in a shop in Bellingham being rebuilt. Along with it, dad took the alternator, which has passed a professional inspection and looks sound, so it'll be getting shined up in dad's shop. And then there's the things attached directly to the block...


No Radiator?

Let's start with the exhaust manifold. We noticed early on that it was missing some bolts. As it turns out it was missing most of it's bolts. Dad will have to fill in the blank on the exact number holding it in place, but it wasn't many. There are some other bolts missing from other parts of the car too, but lets stick with the exhaust for now. We always knew the manifolds would need to come out, and when we finally yanked them, there were no gaskets either. Awesome. Those are getting the spa treatment in Bellingham currently.

After a fair amount of deliberating, we decided it would probably be best if we took a look inside the top end before we tried to run it again. So next the intake manifold came off, and I'd say we were immediately validated in our decision. Unbelievable crap has accumulated in the gallery. Thick gooey, chunky crap. Looking down the passages into the heads, the air intakes look rusty, but okay; however, the water passages are filled with the same brown sludge that's in the radiator. There's an exhaust crossover passage that is meant to warm up the manifold, and that's pretty black, but no surprises there.

And finally, tonight I pulled the valve covers off. More of that grimy gunk. Piles of it. Quarter inch deep in some places. And this in and around all the valve levers & such. It is amazing that this car fired up and ran with all this crap in it's guts. It's hard to do the image justice with a snapshot picture, but this one shows some of the gunk: