Barrman
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- Giddings, Texas
The sun came out and it finally stopped raining this afternoon. This gave me a chance to try and get my old Gasser to start. I was told by the previous owner that the engine had been rebuilt but never turned over before it was left to sit in 1981. I pulled the plugs on Friday and squirted oil in each cylinder and put the plugs back in.
Today, I verified by pulling the oil drain plug that there was none in it. 9 quarts later it was indicating full on the dipstick. I removed the electric oil psi sender and put a mechanical gauge right there on the block. I pulled the plugs back out again and turned the engine over a few times by pulling on the cooling fan. I then hooked up some batteries to just the starter. (I don't trust any of the other wires and don't want to mess with that fire hazard just yet.) I had my 8 year old son, Colton, watch the oil psi gauge while I mashed on the floor mounted starter pedal. It turned over great. I would let it go until a count of 8 and then let it sit for 5-10 seconds and try again. When we still had no pressure indicated on the 5th try, I asked him to look underneath for any oil spilling out. No drips. The next try had him yelling at me about a "huge jet of oil coming out!" I thought it was my hand tight oil psi gauge and tried it again. Same response. I walked around to look and found the problem.
The remote oil filter was not hooked up. I had noticed that but figured since I couldn't find any fittings on the block, that the lines where ever they went were blocked off somewhere. Nope, the previous owner had removed the plate that the lines go to and holds the pressure regulator. He had covered the oil passages with duct tape and painted over it. I had no idea they were hiding there until the oil pushed the tape out of the way.
I don't have the proper plate and couldn't find it anywhere in the truck. I am sure my other truck with the same engine probably has one on it. So, I will have one hopefully in a few weeks once I get that truck home. But, isn't one of the recommended upgrades to a gasser dealing with this plate?
This plate if I understand it right is what makes the oil filter a bypass type compared to a full flow filter type. Right? I figure I might as well go ahead and make it so the engine will last while it is apart and I am searching for parts. Are there ready made parts that let me put a spin on type oil filter on this engine and make it a full time filter? It sure looks like it would be easy to make one up if I had the original plate to start with and a remote screw on filter housing that I could cobble together.
Thanks for the help.
Today, I verified by pulling the oil drain plug that there was none in it. 9 quarts later it was indicating full on the dipstick. I removed the electric oil psi sender and put a mechanical gauge right there on the block. I pulled the plugs back out again and turned the engine over a few times by pulling on the cooling fan. I then hooked up some batteries to just the starter. (I don't trust any of the other wires and don't want to mess with that fire hazard just yet.) I had my 8 year old son, Colton, watch the oil psi gauge while I mashed on the floor mounted starter pedal. It turned over great. I would let it go until a count of 8 and then let it sit for 5-10 seconds and try again. When we still had no pressure indicated on the 5th try, I asked him to look underneath for any oil spilling out. No drips. The next try had him yelling at me about a "huge jet of oil coming out!" I thought it was my hand tight oil psi gauge and tried it again. Same response. I walked around to look and found the problem.
The remote oil filter was not hooked up. I had noticed that but figured since I couldn't find any fittings on the block, that the lines where ever they went were blocked off somewhere. Nope, the previous owner had removed the plate that the lines go to and holds the pressure regulator. He had covered the oil passages with duct tape and painted over it. I had no idea they were hiding there until the oil pushed the tape out of the way.
I don't have the proper plate and couldn't find it anywhere in the truck. I am sure my other truck with the same engine probably has one on it. So, I will have one hopefully in a few weeks once I get that truck home. But, isn't one of the recommended upgrades to a gasser dealing with this plate?
This plate if I understand it right is what makes the oil filter a bypass type compared to a full flow filter type. Right? I figure I might as well go ahead and make it so the engine will last while it is apart and I am searching for parts. Are there ready made parts that let me put a spin on type oil filter on this engine and make it a full time filter? It sure looks like it would be easy to make one up if I had the original plate to start with and a remote screw on filter housing that I could cobble together.
Thanks for the help.