Mach830
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- Vacaville CA
Hi all, First post. Great forum with lots of excellent knowledge.
My buddy and I are both veterans with some experience operating the M35A2. Friend bought a bobbed truck last year (1970 Kaiser Multi-fuel) and yesterday we were troubleshooting some oil leaks. I happened to check the oil for him, which I had never done before on his truck, and found that the crankcase was grossly overfilled. We pulled the rear pan plug and a full 9 gallons of fuel/oil puked out. Even after this draining, I found the crankcase was still close to operating levels, and it appeared to be almost all fuel.
At this point, I realize that bearing damage is probable, along with accelerated wear of pistons, rings, valve guides and just about every other thing that is oil lubricated. The oil pressure is unknown, since he bought it sight unseen on the web with an inoperative gauge. (Yes, I know). I suspect it is out of limits at idle. I have extensive mechanical experience with aircraft and auto engines, but not much diesel.
Maybe there's hope. The engine starts and runs great, no unusual noises, has good power. Turbo sounds normal and the cooling system is fine. I advised the owner to dump the crankcase, fill with fresh oil, and tow it to a reputable qualified diesel mechanic (or maybe drive it if it's only a few miles). I fear that the fuel pump, the injection pump, or an injector is probably bad and if the problem can be found, and the oil flushed and changed a few times, he may get away without a fried engine. I know these old bitches are tough, but I don't know how long the engine has had this problem or how many miles it's been driven in this condition. I think I may be more worried than the owner, although it's his truck and his money so I want to advise him to choose the correct path. This is a really nicely done Deuce, and it deserves proper treatment.
Two questions:
1. Do any of you have experience with this problem and how was it corrected? Sorry that's two questions.
3. Why is there a rear drain plug on the pan? I'm glad it's there, but why is it there?
I've done a thousand internet searches and searched this site as well. Thanks in advance for all inputs.
Chris
My buddy and I are both veterans with some experience operating the M35A2. Friend bought a bobbed truck last year (1970 Kaiser Multi-fuel) and yesterday we were troubleshooting some oil leaks. I happened to check the oil for him, which I had never done before on his truck, and found that the crankcase was grossly overfilled. We pulled the rear pan plug and a full 9 gallons of fuel/oil puked out. Even after this draining, I found the crankcase was still close to operating levels, and it appeared to be almost all fuel.
At this point, I realize that bearing damage is probable, along with accelerated wear of pistons, rings, valve guides and just about every other thing that is oil lubricated. The oil pressure is unknown, since he bought it sight unseen on the web with an inoperative gauge. (Yes, I know). I suspect it is out of limits at idle. I have extensive mechanical experience with aircraft and auto engines, but not much diesel.
Maybe there's hope. The engine starts and runs great, no unusual noises, has good power. Turbo sounds normal and the cooling system is fine. I advised the owner to dump the crankcase, fill with fresh oil, and tow it to a reputable qualified diesel mechanic (or maybe drive it if it's only a few miles). I fear that the fuel pump, the injection pump, or an injector is probably bad and if the problem can be found, and the oil flushed and changed a few times, he may get away without a fried engine. I know these old bitches are tough, but I don't know how long the engine has had this problem or how many miles it's been driven in this condition. I think I may be more worried than the owner, although it's his truck and his money so I want to advise him to choose the correct path. This is a really nicely done Deuce, and it deserves proper treatment.
Two questions:
1. Do any of you have experience with this problem and how was it corrected? Sorry that's two questions.
3. Why is there a rear drain plug on the pan? I'm glad it's there, but why is it there?
I've done a thousand internet searches and searched this site as well. Thanks in advance for all inputs.
Chris