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Projects Mish-Mash Nash -'52 Rambler Wagon

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by In_The_Pink, May 1, 2023.

  1. Is it a runner?
     
    loudbang likes this.
  2. In_The_Pink
    Joined: Jan 9, 2010
    Posts: 788

    In_The_Pink
    Member

    I was told so, and was removed from a running car. Initial peek under the RH valve cover last night revealed some sludge-- not terrible, but not super clean, either.

    I started tearing it down this morning, and after the intake manifold was removed, I looked into each intake port and saw this in #7:

    PXL_20241116_190604868~3.jpg

    It looks like the valve guide has dropped 1/4" or so. Hmmm, time to tear it all down.

    Lifter valley was not pretty, but it looks a bit worse in the pics than in person:

    PXL_20241116_180041001~2.jpg

    Oil pan had no sparkles nor pieces of anything, just some silver sludge...which cleaned up easily:

    PXL_20241116_172859457~2.jpg

    PXL_20241116_174453985~2.jpg

    Cylinder heads both look good, lifters range from "those could be re-used in a pinch" to "failure is imminent", and it looks like one of the rocker shafts was recently changed or removed:

    PXL_20241116_171609720~2.jpg

    PXL_20241116_171624136.jpg

    I'm pretty sure that is not how you install a cotter pin. The seller did mention he had four of these engines at one time, so I'm guessing some parts swapping may have occurred and this one was the last of the four.

    Cylinder bores have some scratches here and there, including a larger scratch in #5. Overall, about what I expected for a used 60+ year old engine.
     
    brEad, Ragged Edge, Chucky and 5 others like this.
  3. In_The_Pink
    Joined: Jan 9, 2010
    Posts: 788

    In_The_Pink
    Member

    Cylinder heads look good and are the 10.25 variety as expected:

    PXL_20241117_000302100~2.jpg

    PXL_20241117_000802859~2.jpg

    No nuts down the intake. :D

    PXL_20241116_161237551~2.jpg

    Bottom end looks good, the rod journals surprisingly nice:

    PXL_20241116_234230347~2.jpg

    Rod bearings show wear, but little to no scoring:

    PXL_20241116_233958774~2.jpg

    PXL_20241116_233946053~2.jpg

    Pistons show some significant wear on the skirts, #8, on the right in the below image being the worst of the bunch:

    PXL_20241116_235818952~2.jpg

    Broken top ring on #2:

    PXL_20241116_234144339~2.jpg

    #7 is the worst bore, showing some vertical scoring:

    PXL_20241116_234636043~2.jpg

    On the bright side, I have two blocks to chose from now, and have the heads I've been looking for, so I'm in good shape. :)
     
    brEad, Ragged Edge, pprather and 4 others like this.
  4. nrgwizard
    Joined: Aug 18, 2006
    Posts: 2,786

    nrgwizard
    Member
    from Minn. uSA

    As long as the Alum isn't rotted in the block, heads or waterpump area - you're golden...
    Marcus...
     
    warhorseracing likes this.
  5. In_The_Pink
    Joined: Jan 9, 2010
    Posts: 788

    In_The_Pink
    Member

    Coolant passages look good, and I even had to drain a bit of coolant out, so I'm in the clear there.

    Water pump was replaced at some point, and not too many miles on it:

    PXL_20241117_164016847~2.jpg

    PXL_20241117_164004879~2.jpg

    Considering a NOS or rebuilt water pump is in the $200+ range, I'm good with this. This one is definitely better than the other used one I have, and I can't use the later Buick 300 style due to how the alternator bracket mounts.

    Timing cover is a bit worse for wear, and has some corrosion in one spot, plus, the usual oil pump gear wear:

    PXL_20241117_163935318~2.jpg

    PXL_20241117_163940598~2.jpg

    PXL_20241117_163949786~2.jpg

    Crank (and specifically the journals) looks very nice:

    PXL_20241117_164134677~2.jpg

    PXL_20241117_164139560~2.jpg

    Main bearings look to be original?:

    PXL_20241117_021848293~2.jpg

    PXL_20241117_021644428~2.jpg
     
    brEad, Chucky, Squablow and 5 others like this.
  6. nrgwizard
    Joined: Aug 18, 2006
    Posts: 2,786

    nrgwizard
    Member
    from Minn. uSA

    Yup, corrosion from wrong type antifreeze, or none at all, is the old die-cast Alum engine killer.
    As for the corrosion that's there, those Alum "welding/soldering" sticks actually work well - if used correctly. Getting(& keeping) things clean & not overheating the parts is the trick. You've got a good start. :) .
    Marcus...
     
    brEad likes this.
  7. Tow Truck Tom
    Joined: Jul 3, 2018
    Posts: 2,593

    Tow Truck Tom
    Member
    from Clayton DE

    Amazing rescue.
    Keep it coming.
    Thanks
     

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