barneyrb
Silver Member
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2008
- Messages
- 183
I have heard that brake fluid will unstick a motor when nothing else will. FWIW...
Pete, I was googling some other venues for stuck engine ideas and came across an automotive situation where the problem wasn't in the engine at all but in the transmission. What do you know about your transmission? MikeD74T
A method that I have used many of times is breaking it lose with grease. I have done this on very large CATs down to a flat head Fords. You remove all the injectors or spark plugs take one injector or plug and weld a pipe nipple or zerk fitting to it. Then find a cylinder that the piston is allmost to the top and install the modified injector or plug. Then start pumping grease into the cylinder. A air grease gun is best but a hand pump will work to. Once the engine is broken free remove the injector or plug and spin it over with the starter. This will make a heck of a mess and the grease will hit the roof. I have done countless times and have never failed to break one loose. That is if you don't have a rod broke or something like that.
P.S. you will have to take the rocker arms loose to the cylinder that you are pumping up with grease.
Can anyone tell me what I'm looking at? This is the front end of a Ford 881D that has a seized engine. I'm trying to bar her over. At first I was placing a large wrench over an odd shaped piece of steel bolted over the pulley. The inside of this piece clearly is the female receiver for a hand crank of some sort.
View attachment 108370
After pulling on this for several days I didn't like that it was doing some damage, so I decided to just remove it - hoping to find the legendary "pulley nut". Well there's a 15/16th nut for sure, but is this the pulley nut?
View attachment 108369
if I crank to the left it comes off - and with an easy tug so does the pulley it holds in place (gunked in with white silicone mind you). This exposes the front end of the crankshaft that has a 16 tooth or so splined end. I really don't like the feel when I try to bar her over by tightening this nut down on the pulley. What am I doing wrong here? Should I be baring over using the piece attached to the pulley?
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Thanks JB. Kinda what I thought looking at the SOS design (in I&T). She's in park by default, which is also the "gear" she needs to be started in. Just wanted clarification. I'll probably pull the cover tonight and just have a looksee at the Cam assembly.Put the gizmo back on the crank snout and bar it over with that. I use a cats paw pry bar that is pretty long and put a cheater on it. If you use the crank snout bolt, you will over tighten it and very very very likely break it off and that will make you cry!
The tranny is not your stuck issue. The SOS does not give any back pressure to cranking like a gear trans would. You are just spinning the pump and that isn't stopping it.
I would keep putting ATF & diesel or the kroil in each cylinder. If you have a helper (or rig up a hanging weight on the end of the cheater bar), put a hundred pounds or more on the end of the cheater and tap on the piston tops with the handle of a 3 lb hand maul. Us the motion to set a new head on a handle. I put a thick wad of rags on top of the pistons and rap each one. As you have 2 loose, you can just play the bongo drums with the other two~! Should work. Just don't go whacko while whacking it. Harder is not better. You just want some shock to start the motion so the hanging weight (or kid or wife or helper) will rotate the crank.
good luck,
jb