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If you need a valve and/or a spring I have both if you need it.
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No big deal to replace a spring, with the piston at TDC. It's a one-man job and can be done with no special tools.)
Apparently I wasn't paying close attention, but it is the exhaust valve on the second cylinder, (4th from the front of engine.) Will the rope-in-the-cylinder trick work in this case?You can do the spring without pulling the head. Put the piston at TDC compression and replace the spring.
No rope and no trick needed, since when the piston is all the way up it will hold the valve(s) in place, almost closed.Will the rope-in-the-cylinder trick work in this case?
Id say so! Sounds night and day different, much smoother sounding. Started within 2 seconds, whereas prior I would have to hold for 5-10 seconds and sometimes max out the throttle cable to get it to crank up.Does it run better?
Awesome!!Id say so! Sounds night and day different, much smoother sounding. Started within 2 seconds, whereas prior I would have to hold for 5-10 seconds and sometimes max out the throttle cable to get it to crank up.
Also, never had it above 50mph before.
As for the leaking, there is still some leaking, but night and day different than before.
If there is that much slop, it might be worth checking the pinion bearings, too. Otherwise the new seal will start to leak in short order.Wanted to bring this back to the top with an update.
The leaking that started this hunting expedition has been stopped since last year. Truck has been in various stages of torn-apart since then and I've probably only got about 30-50 miles on it since then. There is still oil on (almost) everything that there was originally, but none on the ground under the truck.
Anyways, as I was spending time on the underside of things, I grabbed ahold of the front driveshaft to pull myself forward and felt about a half-inch (?) of slop.
The MF oil leak that I spent hours upon hours, and hundreds of dollars on diagnosing and trying to fix, turned out to be the front axle, rear-facing pinion seal.