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Hot Rods Sometimes a person shouldn’t work on an engine

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Dustin 257, Nov 24, 2023.

  1. Dustin 257
    Joined: Aug 20, 2021
    Posts: 281

    Dustin 257
    Member
    from Dallas

    IMG_7655.jpeg IMG_7656.jpeg Picked up a FE engine that seized. I assume the owner did his own distributor swap and dislodged the oil pump rod, the keepers were not on the rod. 1 and 5 rods got hot.
     
    Truckdoctor Andy likes this.
  2. I have seen those twisted like a barber pole.
     
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  3. Dustin 257
    Joined: Aug 20, 2021
    Posts: 281

    Dustin 257
    Member
    from Dallas

    This one was just laying in the pan lol.
     
    Truckdoctor Andy likes this.
  4. chicken
    Joined: Aug 15, 2004
    Posts: 617

    chicken
    Member
    from Kansas

    Just below the oil pump I see a spun main bearing as well. Block is likely hurt too. That's a shame.
     
  5. corncobcoupe
    Joined: May 26, 2001
    Posts: 8,003

    corncobcoupe
    SUPER MODERATOR
    Staff Member

  6. Dustin 257
    Joined: Aug 20, 2021
    Posts: 281

    Dustin 257
    Member
    from Dallas

    Yep. Line hone needed for sure, rods resized, and what ever needed. Deciding if it’ll be worth it.
     
    Truckdoctor Andy likes this.
  7. Yikes! Yea, it amazes me some of the things people do to cars.
     
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  8. TA DAD
    Joined: Mar 2, 2014
    Posts: 1,420

    TA DAD
    Member
    from NC

    Lol, You should have seen me when I was young ! hacking stuff up !
     
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  9. Dustin 257
    Joined: Aug 20, 2021
    Posts: 281

    Dustin 257
    Member
    from Dallas

    Yep. I’ve a got 361 FE I’ll probably use for my wagon. Keep it period correct anyways. This motor was free, so i don’t have anything in it
     
  10. TA DAD
    Joined: Mar 2, 2014
    Posts: 1,420

    TA DAD
    Member
    from NC

    That is when a piece of valve stem seal got in the oil pump and locked it up. Lol. I have fixed a many of them.
     
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  11. Well, yea, I could resemble that remark as well. :D
     
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  12. sunbeam
    Joined: Oct 22, 2010
    Posts: 6,311

    sunbeam
    Member

    Years ago My neighbor was fixing up an old Mustang put in a rebuilt engine . The car had no working gauges he test drove it 6 miles and called me. He said the engine was making noise and would hardly run I checked no oil pump drive. To my surprise the rebuilder stood the loss. The old adage applies not enough time to do it right but enough to do it over.
     
  13. Dustin 257
    Joined: Aug 20, 2021
    Posts: 281

    Dustin 257
    Member
    from Dallas

    That’s a good quote. Havnt heard that one before. I try to teach my son, do it once, do it right. It gets old doing things twice.
     
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  14. Mike VV
    Joined: Sep 28, 2010
    Posts: 3,213

    Mike VV
    Member
    from SoCal

    Back in my high school days, I had a friend that his family ran a small automotive shop. One day he asked me if I'd help him with a problem. He didn't want his dad to know..!
    We headed to his shop. Building an FE, Ford, he couldn't figure out why the crank had frozen as he was installing rods/pistons. We messed around. We put the block on the ground, he put a giant "Crescent" wrench on the crank snout, and stood on it. The crank didn't move.

    We started removing rod caps, to find that he'd put two connecting rod caps...on backward !
    That's all it took to bind the crank solid.

    The engine, eventually, actually ran pretty good.

    Mike
     
  15. jaw22w
    Joined: Mar 2, 2013
    Posts: 1,679

    jaw22w
    Member
    from Indiana

    Sometimes I think there oughta be some kind of test/license/certification to be able to buy tools!
     
  16. 2OLD2FAST
    Joined: Feb 3, 2010
    Posts: 5,712

    2OLD2FAST
    Member
    from illinois

    The tool industry would disappear!
     
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  17. BJR
    Joined: Mar 11, 2005
    Posts: 10,556

    BJR
    Member

    Tools using tools.
     
  18. bchctybob
    Joined: Sep 18, 2011
    Posts: 5,551

    bchctybob
    Member

    I was probably 13-14 and working with “the big guys” on a ‘56 Chevy trying to start a really tight newly rebuilt 301. We pushed it all around the neighborhood, popping the clutch until it spun over. Never did run. Turns out the pop-up pistons were on the rods backwards locking up the crank. Three teen age guys, none of us questioned why we couldn’t turn the engine over with a wrench!! We all learned from that one.
     
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  19. X-cpe
    Joined: Mar 9, 2018
    Posts: 2,106

    X-cpe

    Love that. I heard it as, "If you don't have time to do it right the first time, where are you going to find time to do it a second time."
     
  20. SOMETIMES A PERSON SHOULDN’T WORK ON AN ENGINE

    Yep, completely agree. The last time I was in the market for a race engine, I had Spot (my pet) build it for me ... after the rebuild the engine was a real dog :eek::D;)
     
  21. Sky Six
    Joined: Mar 15, 2018
    Posts: 12,736

    Sky Six
    Member
    from Arizona

    Things can always be worse. I purchased my latest car, and this is what the seller didn't tell me.
    20230613_130421[16543].jpg
     
  22. Budget36
    Joined: Nov 29, 2014
    Posts: 14,570

    Budget36
    Member

    What the heck is going on there? Welded up and ground down?
     
  23. Sky Six
    Joined: Mar 15, 2018
    Posts: 12,736

    Sky Six
    Member
    from Arizona

    Truthfully, I got no idea what was going on, I just repurposed them into door stops. The guy also welded the studs to one of the brake drums also.
     
  24. finn
    Joined: Jan 25, 2006
    Posts: 1,350

    finn
    Member

    I pretzeled one on a 65 Galaxy 500 289 in 1970 or so. Cold start on a -20 degree day and bits of valve stem umbrella in the pickup screen and pump.

    I drove it home (gingerly) maybe two miles with no oil pressure. New pump and shaft and the engine lived on.
     
  25. We had a total dumbshit do the exact same thing to a Ford 370 truck engine. The shop got to rebuild the engine for free and the amazing thing is the stupid f$&k didn’t lose his job over it.
     
  26. gene-koning
    Joined: Oct 28, 2016
    Posts: 4,637

    gene-koning
    Member

    There are times we learn by experience. Sometimes we don't know what we should have or should not have done until after it fails.

    The more time and/or money it takes to fix that failure, the better we will remember it. Good book learning might be remembered, expensive failures are usually not forgotten. Sometimes, experience can be a brutal teacher.
     
  27. X-cpe
    Joined: Mar 9, 2018
    Posts: 2,106

    X-cpe

    The only people who don't make mistakes are the ones who don't do anything, and that is the biggest mistake of all. It's when you repeat mistakes that you should be scared as hell.
     
  28. Exactly. This is what I tell new engineers that work for me to be honest. Being too scared to make a mistake keeps them from doing anything great. The other side of this is that we should all ask questions as well when we don’t know what the heck we are doing. :D
     
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  29. Lone Star Mopar
    Joined: Nov 2, 2005
    Posts: 4,035

    Lone Star Mopar
    Member

    Sometime you just need to realize the limit of your cababilities....Or not.
     
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  30. X-cpe
    Joined: Mar 9, 2018
    Posts: 2,106

    X-cpe

    The only people who know where their limit is are the ones who have attempted something beyond that limit.
     
    CSPIDY, lostmind, jaw22w and 2 others like this.

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