| Author |
Message |
jor
Guest
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Posted:
Thu Nov 24, 2005 7:48 pm Post subject:
Fixing Cracked Block |
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RayO and others have panned Bar's Leak and other similar products. I tend to
agree with their comments but I am in a bit of a bind on a non-Toyota (old
Ford pickup). I just dropped a rebuilt engine in. For the rebuild I used a
block that had been cracked. The machinist fixed the crack (between freeze
plugs) but it appears to be leaking. The leak is minimal right now, just a
tiny bit of residue. I really don't want to pull this engine again so I am
looking for a fix. I should add that the rebuild itself if a quality build
and that I push this engine a bit (maybe up to 5 or 5.5K RPM on occasion. So
what do everyone suggest for something to prevent the leak from gettng
worse? Oh, I'm in Arizona and we only get a few days of freezing
temperatures. Heat is the culprit around here. Thanks.
jor
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C. E. White
Guest
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Posted:
Thu Nov 24, 2005 9:28 pm Post subject:
Re: Fixing Cracked Block |
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"jor" <jor@jor.com> wrote in message
news:8qGdncITe_YEWRjenZ2dnUVZ_tmdnZ2d@comcast.com...
| Quote: | RayO and others have panned Bar's Leak and other similar products. I tend
to agree with their comments but I am in a bit of a bind on a non-Toyota
(old Ford pickup). I just dropped a rebuilt engine in. For the rebuild I
used a block that had been cracked. The machinist fixed the crack (between
freeze plugs) but it appears to be leaking. The leak is minimal right now,
just a tiny bit of residue. I really don't want to pull this engine again
so I am looking for a fix. I should add that the rebuild itself if a
quality build and that I push this engine a bit (maybe up to 5 or 5.5K RPM
on occasion. So what do everyone suggest for something to prevent the leak
from gettng worse? Oh, I'm in Arizona and we only get a few days of
freezing temperatures. Heat is the culprit around here. Thanks.
|
Why not try the bars leak? Ford puts it in vehicles at the factory...
Ed |
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Ray O
Guest
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Posted:
Fri Nov 25, 2005 1:01 am Post subject:
Re: Fixing Cracked Block |
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"jor" <jor@jor.com> wrote in message
news:8qGdncITe_YEWRjenZ2dnUVZ_tmdnZ2d@comcast.com...
| Quote: | RayO and others have panned Bar's Leak and other similar products. I tend
to agree with their comments but I am in a bit of a bind on a non-Toyota
(old Ford pickup). I just dropped a rebuilt engine in. For the rebuild I
used a block that had been cracked. The machinist fixed the crack (between
freeze plugs) but it appears to be leaking. The leak is minimal right now,
just a tiny bit of residue. I really don't want to pull this engine again
so I am looking for a fix. I should add that the rebuild itself if a
quality build and that I push this engine a bit (maybe up to 5 or 5.5K RPM
on occasion. So what do everyone suggest for something to prevent the leak
from gettng worse? Oh, I'm in Arizona and we only get a few days of
freezing temperatures. Heat is the culprit around here. Thanks.
jor
This scenario is where I would recommend Bars Leak - a case where the cost |
of a normal repair would be out of line with the vehicle's value or the
owner's willingness to pay for the repair.
--
Ray O
correct the return address punctuation to reply
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jor
Guest
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Posted:
Fri Nov 25, 2005 8:06 pm Post subject:
Re: Fixing Cracked Block |
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"jor" <jor@jor.com> wrote in message
news:8qGdncITe_YEWRjenZ2dnUVZ_tmdnZ2d@comcast.com...
| Quote: | RayO and others have panned Bar's Leak and other similar products. I tend
to agree with their comments but I am in a bit of a bind on a non-Toyota
(old Ford pickup). I just dropped a rebuilt engine in. For the rebuild I
used a block that had been cracked. The machinist fixed the crack (between
freeze plugs) but it appears to be leaking. The leak is minimal right now,
just a tiny bit of residue. I really don't want to pull this engine again
so I am looking for a fix. I should add that the rebuild itself if a
quality build and that I push this engine a bit (maybe up to 5 or 5.5K RPM
on occasion. So what do everyone suggest for something to prevent the leak
from gettng worse? Oh, I'm in Arizona and we only get a few days of
freezing temperatures. Heat is the culprit around here. Thanks.
jor
Thanks, guys. Bar's Leak it is! I examined the block closely yesterday and |
it doesn't appear to be leaking so I'm keeping my fingers crossed. The
lesson here is to stay away from cracked blocks. I was looking for a good
390 builder, couldn't find one and took a chance. Thanks.
jor |
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Jeff Strickland
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Nov 27, 2005 9:17 am Post subject:
Re: Fixing Cracked Block |
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"jor" <jor@jor.com> wrote in message
news:8qGdncITe_YEWRjenZ2dnUVZ_tmdnZ2d@comcast.com...
| Quote: | RayO and others have panned Bar's Leak and other similar products. I tend
to agree with their comments but I am in a bit of a bind on a non-Toyota
(old Ford pickup). I just dropped a rebuilt engine in. For the rebuild I
used a block that had been cracked. The machinist fixed the crack (between
freeze plugs) but it appears to be leaking. The leak is minimal right now,
just a tiny bit of residue. I really don't want to pull this engine again
so I am looking for a fix. I should add that the rebuild itself if a
quality build and that I push this engine a bit (maybe up to 5 or 5.5K RPM
on occasion. So what do everyone suggest for something to prevent the leak
from gettng worse? Oh, I'm in Arizona and we only get a few days of
freezing temperatures. Heat is the culprit around here. Thanks.
jor
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Well, for starters, stop pushing it to the 5 or 5.5k RPM markers. Give the
poor old thing a break before it breaks. |
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Philip
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Nov 27, 2005 10:03 pm Post subject:
Re: Fixing Cracked Block |
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What is an "old Ford?" 289 or one of the long stroke engines ... it makes
a difference regarding winging the RPM up to 5500. Either way, these old
push rod engines were not intended for that sort of thing. Chevys are sort
of elastic but Fords store those abuses and then one day explode like so
much glass.
"jor" <jor@jor.com> wrote in message
news:8qGdncITe_YEWRjenZ2dnUVZ_tmdnZ2d@comcast.com...
| Quote: | RayO and others have panned Bar's Leak and other similar products. I tend
to agree with their comments but I am in a bit of a bind on a non-Toyota
(old Ford pickup). I just dropped a rebuilt engine in. For the rebuild I
used a block that had been cracked. The machinist fixed the crack (between
freeze plugs) but it appears to be leaking. The leak is minimal right now,
just a tiny bit of residue. I really don't want to pull this engine again
so I am looking for a fix. I should add that the rebuild itself if a
quality build and that I push this engine a bit (maybe up to 5 or 5.5K RPM
on occasion. So what do everyone suggest for something to prevent the leak
from gettng worse? Oh, I'm in Arizona and we only get a few days of
freezing temperatures. Heat is the culprit around here. Thanks.
jor
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