Long story short blew engine with water
We are in the top of WA went through a water crossing and stuck the nose in deep water put a rod through the block. locked the the engine solid. We are 5,000k from home so plan to pull engine down remove broken rod and piston, block oil port in crank etc. then drive it home, not sure if it will be a 4 or 5 cylinder till we get it apart. But ha it's all a new experience.
Tony |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
You may have to block the inlet and the exhaust ports with some thing between the manifold and the port, to prevent the oil from blowing out.
Harvey. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
I think we may pull the hydraulic lifters and plug the oil holes in the head leaving the valves in place to keep the cylinder closed.
Please offer any suggestions you have it will be appricated |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
wow - this sort of leaves "man Vs wild" as kid's stuff.....
Good luck & cannot wait to see any photos or write-up about this part of your adventure. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
Tony,
May the EG33 Gods smile down upon you! Man vs Wild, indeed!! Will you still need to seal up the ventilated block to keep oil from the other mains from migrating out? Cheers Bill |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
Ouch!
Where exactly in WA? Would it be easier for one of us with a spare block to freight it out to you? |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
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Pulling the engine down to day to see there to go. Harvey. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
Okay engine in bits broke rods 1 and 2. Block okay except for a big hole you can put your fist through. But it missed all the oil and coolant ports. One of the rod jammed the crank and that is why it did no further damage. When we took the intake manifold off 5 cylinders were full of water. When we removed the head 4 cylinders had water. Crank took the hit and didn't get damaged so I am amazed.
Maybe tomorrow will be a bad day but today was a god one. The pistons are good and could be reused with a little touch up. Can't post photos as I am in caravan park. Very interest project pretty sure we will be coming home on 4 cylinder. Keep well all. Tony |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
A 2.2lt Pickle Power:eek:
That will be a first mate. At least from Kununurra to Griffith is down hill all the way.:D Harvey. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
That must have made an "exciting" noise when it happened. Change of underwear needed?
Are you sure you wouldn't be better off with a different block? Surely that kind of impact would have weakened the walls? It'd suck if you got it all back together, only to have it fracture further. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
Plugged crank with 5by 5mm set screws worked great filled hole in block with the original pice and Devcon, all in all it looks pretty good so time well tell.
It's a bit of a wild plan as a few manchanics think it won't run but hell lets see who is right. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
I am sure you will get it running enough to drive, but to do the 10.000K? home may be the test.
You would normally go the short way, cross country, but with that set-up, that may be risky, so the long way around would be the way. Harvey. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
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Bill |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
Waiting on some speedy selves to plug hydraulic lifter oil ports.
|
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
Things are progressing, talked to Tony last night, just waiting on the sleeves to replace the hydraulic lifters, and it should be good to go.
He didn’t have to split the block to get the rods out, as it made a handy access hole in the top of the block that he could undo the big ends, what luck.:rolleyes: The engine should run ok as a 4 cylinder 2.2 Lt, the primary balance will be ok as the two missing rods are opposite, but there could be slight secondary out of balance, with the mass of the two rods missing. The firing order will be “fire, fire, miss, fire, fire, miss," which should be fine. The only other problem is the MAF sensor that will only read 66% of the max air flow on full throttle. Really need a Liberty 2.2 MAF sensor to run right, but where Tony is, does not have any Suby wreckers, so a compromise of running the car with out the sensor, so it uses the back-up tables of rpm and throttle opening, till he gets some where he can get one. To-day should tell. Harvey. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
It didn't work found a airflow meter from a 2.2 but just couldn't get the right mix.
Anyway gave it a go now on plane home today will sort car out on truck. It wasn't a totally wasted excersise getting the engine to run reduced the freight bill by $1,300. Tony |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
Nobody can say, you didn't try Tony.:ninja:
Doing all that work on the side of the road, in the bush, does take a special person. You have the determination, just need the workshop. Sometimes doing the impossible takes a bit more assistance.:cool: Harvey. |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...9/PICT0635.JPG
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...9/PICT0648.JPG https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...9/PICT0623.JPG https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...9/PICT0632.JPG So there it is and I got it todrive afterthe rebuild. Could have done a 1,000ks but not 4,000. Tony |
Re: Long story short blew engine with water
My reaction is just, Wow! There should be a Hall of Fame for this car and, even more, the Owner. An inspiration for all of us sitting on our fat asses watching the big screen.:o What a story and adventure. Ever consider writing a book?
Gene |
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