acme66
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Forgive me if there is a thread on this, I couldn't find it. Just trying to be informed as I decide to rebuild, repower or put a crate motor in our tour truck a 1984 925a1. I have ruled out a 'take out' motor simply because I am dealing with a 2 out of 3 failure rate on mystery motors so far and spring isn't here yet. (side note, lost liner seals in both motors at the start of spring after running the engines normaly the previous season)
I have questions on the rebuilding process and sealed military crate motors in general.
1. When they are rebuilt, is there a minimum amount of work done? For instance are the heads always pulled, the liners, bearings replaced, injectors inspected? What is the minimum amount of rebuilding I could expect to find in a sealed mystery crate motor?
2. Is there a way to tell of the crate is still sealed?
3. Are the motors run tested at the shop or boxed away virgin? Has it been properly timed or just the close enough to start, time in truck scenario?
4. How long is too long? If the crate still looks sealed up, how long before you just don't dare dropping it in and running it? If I have to pull down the crate motor then might just stay with mine.
5. How complete are they? Should I expect to find water pump, injector pump and compressor bolted on? Power steering pump, intake/exhaust manifolds, starter? My impression from asking around is a direct drop in with everything except power steering pump and starter.
6. What don't I know about crate motors but should before I make a choice and start dropping coin?
7. Personal experiences with them, better luck than the mystery 'ran when parked' motors?
Just for your own entertainment:
Rebuilding - I have pulled one of the NHC250s down (have video) and inspected. Looks like 6 liners, bearings and gaskets and we will be back in business. Trying to decide if piston failure is due to over fueling by an injector or liner failure getting water on the piston skirt. If it is the first then add 6 tested or rebuilt injectors to the bill.
Repower - Motor currently up for consideration is a Detroit 8.2L turbocharged V8 mounted to the GMC top-kick automatic transmission. Not the most loved motor ever in the truck world. We would have some gearing issues but it would be closer when running the 1400 or 1600 tires than thought.
Thoughts always welcome, appreciated and read... but not always followed.
Ken
I have questions on the rebuilding process and sealed military crate motors in general.
1. When they are rebuilt, is there a minimum amount of work done? For instance are the heads always pulled, the liners, bearings replaced, injectors inspected? What is the minimum amount of rebuilding I could expect to find in a sealed mystery crate motor?
2. Is there a way to tell of the crate is still sealed?
3. Are the motors run tested at the shop or boxed away virgin? Has it been properly timed or just the close enough to start, time in truck scenario?
4. How long is too long? If the crate still looks sealed up, how long before you just don't dare dropping it in and running it? If I have to pull down the crate motor then might just stay with mine.
5. How complete are they? Should I expect to find water pump, injector pump and compressor bolted on? Power steering pump, intake/exhaust manifolds, starter? My impression from asking around is a direct drop in with everything except power steering pump and starter.
6. What don't I know about crate motors but should before I make a choice and start dropping coin?
7. Personal experiences with them, better luck than the mystery 'ran when parked' motors?
Just for your own entertainment:
Rebuilding - I have pulled one of the NHC250s down (have video) and inspected. Looks like 6 liners, bearings and gaskets and we will be back in business. Trying to decide if piston failure is due to over fueling by an injector or liner failure getting water on the piston skirt. If it is the first then add 6 tested or rebuilt injectors to the bill.
Repower - Motor currently up for consideration is a Detroit 8.2L turbocharged V8 mounted to the GMC top-kick automatic transmission. Not the most loved motor ever in the truck world. We would have some gearing issues but it would be closer when running the 1400 or 1600 tires than thought.
Thoughts always welcome, appreciated and read... but not always followed.
Ken