dodge man
Super Star Member
I'm going to throw another idea out here, maybe the oil and antifreeze problem is not related to installing the block heater, another problem may have cropped up at the same time.
I'm struggling with oil puking out of the exhaust without any adverse engine sounds when running??? Maybe the crankcase immediately went over full enough to cause that?? And if that's the case and you removed the oil dipstick, wouldn't coolant eventually run out of the dipstick hole if you kept filling the radiator?? Gravity and such??
Ovrszd:
I think I can explain this better. In relation to the radiator, which is the highest and lowest place where the antifreeze resides, I put in about 2 gallons of antifreeze. Figure that the block heater is approximately the height of the middle of the radiator. I estimate that I got about a gallon of straight antifreeze out of the drain plug. The tractor has the split drain pan with two plugs. The straight antifreeze flowed only out of the right side of the engine, the side of the block that the heater was installed. It reinforces my theory that the antifreeze was allowed to flow straight down into the pan with nothing else in the way.
If it comes down to it, I have located a machine shop that can weld the hole, bore the cylinder and re-sleeve at a fraction of the cost of a new block. I am becoming more optimistic as time goes on.
The holes may not be above the piston at bdc but if they are there would not be much if any pressure inside the cylinder at that point. Anitfreeze that gets in the cylinder then blown out looks a lot like oil as it mixes with soot.
I'm struggling with oil puking out of the exhaust without any adverse engine sounds when running??? Maybe the crankcase immediately went over full enough to cause that?? And if that's the case and you removed the oil dipstick, wouldn't coolant eventually run out of the dipstick hole if you kept filling the radiator?? Gravity and such??
Ovrszd:
I think I can explain this better. In relation to the radiator, which is the highest and lowest place where the antifreeze resides, I put in about 2 gallons of antifreeze. Figure that the block heater is approximately the height of the middle of the radiator. I estimate that I got about a gallon of straight antifreeze out of the drain plug. The tractor has the split drain pan with two plugs. The straight antifreeze flowed only out of the right side of the engine, the side of the block that the heater was installed. It reinforces my theory that the antifreeze was allowed to flow straight down into the pan with nothing else in the way.
If it comes down to it, I have located a machine shop that can weld the hole, bore the cylinder and re-sleeve at a fraction of the cost of a new block. I am becoming more optimistic as time goes on.
I agree with your theory concerning the pure coolant in the ride side of the oil pan. I'm very confident you drilled thru the bottom portion of the cylinder. I'm thinking when you could only poke the nail in 1/8" you were hitting the piston skirt. You might try rotating the engine by hand to see if there's a point when you can poke your nail further in?? This would indicate the piston is at or near TDC and your nail is poking into the cylinder below the skirt.
I just can't think your holes are high enough to be above the piston rings and into the compression chamber. If so, there would be a LOT of strange things going on. Sortta like a blown head gasket allowing compression into a coolant jacket. Will puke coolant badly.
Not being able to see the situation it's a bit hard to give solid advice. If the holes are below the piston rings and the only problem is allowing coolant into the engine block I'd consider a shadetree fix such as JB Weld or some other quality product. All it's gotta hold is the pressure of your radiator cap. Maybe 15 psi?? Not sure about what your pressure cap is rated at??