DJ54
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2009
- Messages
- 4,629
- Location
- Carroll, Ohio
- Tractor
- IH Farmall 656 gas/ IH 240 Utility/ 2, Super C Farmalls/ 2, Farmall A's/ Farmall BN/McCormick-Deering OS-6/McCormick-Deering O-4/ '36 Farmall F-12/ 480 Case hoe. '65 Ford 2000 3 cyl., 4 spd. w/3 spd Aux. Trans
Years ago when a few of us were restoring old hit & miss engines, & tractors, if one was really stuck bad, we'd, as mentioned braze a pipe fitting to an old spark plug, with the porcelain knocked out. Reduce down to female 1/8" pipe, then screw a 1/8" grease zerk in it, and pump the cylinder full of grease. You'll need to remove the rocker arm, so all valves are closed. Once the cylinder is full, keep pumping. A normal hand grease gun will produce approx. 12,000 psi. Multiply that times the diameter of the piston, and you can see that creates quite a force. It's a mess to clean up, but never had one we couldn't get out.
On tractors, they were usually so bad, we needed to replace the sleeves anyway, so not a big problem. Grease was salvaged to put on plows & such.
On tractors, they were usually so bad, we needed to replace the sleeves anyway, so not a big problem. Grease was salvaged to put on plows & such.