#1
IP: 108.176.255.229
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Valve Lifters
Folks -
A couple years ago, I bought a back-up A4 that had been mostly rebuilt from the journals up and is clean and shiny, with a bunch of old parts that were with the engine. The engine sat in my shop, unheated for about a year or so, covered with a plastic tarp, with plenty of airspace around it. I just took it out this week to start putting it all together again, and hopefully put it in my boat before she goes in the water in a month or two. The block is assembled and attached to the oil pan, but the head is still off. All seems to be functioning properly, and everything turns when I put the crank on it, but the valve lifters don't want to spring back down properly and need a little persuasion. Ive been hosing them down with PB blaster every few hours for a couple of days and I'm making some headway, but most of them are still really sticky and one of them is still stuck. Is there anything else I should be doing to un-gum them? Pour vinegar on 'em? Seafoam? Hit 'em with a big hammer? Thanks for any thoughts, Chris Ericson 29 Fair Haven, NY Last edited by caeruleus; 03-31-2013 at 07:32 AM. |
#2
IP: 216.115.121.240
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I am understanding you have stuck valves in a "new" longblock?
I would say one of two issues: 1. Rust in the valve guides 2. springs are sacked remedy for either of my ideas: disassemble and check.
__________________
Whiskeyjack a '68 Columbia 36 rebuilt A-4 with 2:1 "Since when is napping doing nothing?" |
#3
IP: 76.68.255.63
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If the lifters are not rusted up, then they may have experienced a lack of oil when running causing them to deform. That is, become wider at the base than the top. I had to remove two with a vice grip on each, moving the grip back and forth and raising the lifter at the same time.
This group likes using 50% acetone and 50% Auto Transmission Fluid to release parts. Also a little propane torch on the lifter, if you dare. |
#4
IP: 108.176.255.229
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Marvel?
I'm trying to avoid tearing the block apart until I've tried everything else. The lifters (from what i can see of them), are shiny and perfect. I'm also thinking about plugging the 4 holes in the bottom of the gallery, replacing the cover, and filling the gallery with Marvel and just letting 'em sit for a few days and see if they free up. Is there anywhere I can see an exploded view of the valve lifter, valve and cam assemblies, to get a an idea of what I'm looking at?
Last edited by caeruleus; 03-30-2013 at 10:51 PM. |
#5
IP: 108.176.255.229
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Lat, the valves are a little sticky but they're snapping down mostly. That problem should clear itself up once the engine starts and heats and I get some engine cleaner working through the system. The problem is in the lifters themselves.
Sony, I'll try your acetone and tranny fluid idea. The tappets *could* be rusted, but I'm thinking more and more that it's gotta be some kind of gummy issue. The engine never ran (and was never completely assembled) since being rebored. So maybe old oil residue from oil they used when sliding the tappets into the guide? I can't imagine that when they put the tappets in they didn't check to see if they were deformed. There's no seal in the tappet guide to get dried out and sticky is there? It's just the tappet directly in its hole in the block? Is there an exploded diagram I can look at of the way the valve tappets, springs and valves are assembled? Crazy question: If I removed the valves and springs above them, is it possible to lift the tappets out from above into the gallery? or is there some kind of flange holding them in at the bottom by the camshaft? |
#6
IP: 216.115.121.240
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I think you are on it. If they are not too rusty, then you are correct in the approach to lube them up and wiggle them back into action.
They are not flanged, but they have to come out the bottom after the cam is out(somebody correct me if i don't remember right). They are just too long to come out through the top of the lifter gallery. lifters in general are some of the simplest in concept, yet most precision parts of an engine. A little rust or goo can stick them up easy. storage under a tarp outside is never the best. Glad you could get to this before it went too far.
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Whiskeyjack a '68 Columbia 36 rebuilt A-4 with 2:1 "Since when is napping doing nothing?" Last edited by lat 64; 03-31-2013 at 01:10 AM. |
#7
IP: 184.94.29.134
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No,the lifters remove from the top.
Remove the adjuster, spring, and valve. A 1/2" spanner fits on the top of the lifter to wiggle it. You can force the lifter down with overnight pressure. Then raise it with the cam. The bottom of the lifter is the fatest, so lower it. An off-the-wall idea is to spray it with nitrogen, that will shrink it. While you are there Caerules, could you develop a technique to clean out the channel of oil that feeds the lifters? I believe that just a little lower, there are 3, 1/8npt tapped holes leading to the oil channel. The ones used for the OPSS, and oil pressure sensor, plus one in the middle. Last edited by Sony2000; 03-31-2013 at 08:02 AM. |
#8
IP: 72.82.114.71
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Never heard of anyone removing them from the top.
I would never remove the adjuster from the tappet. The fit is a locking fit, so the more the adjuster is turned the more the threads are deformed, and will be losing the ability to keep your adjustment.
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Tyring to keep the Bay's Wooden Boat's history from dying off completely. Daniel |
#9
IP: 76.68.255.63
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My engine was in a crate, in the middle of a shipyard the summer of 2011. I believe the only way to remove the lifter from the top, is to remove the adjuster. After removing 2 (each at the extreme ends of the gallery) I resurfaced both before replacing them.
Shortly afterwards, I entertained the staff, with the sounds of an Atomic 4 running inside it's crate! That would never have happened without this forum. Can there be more than one type of lifter? I don't think so. Last edited by Sony2000; 03-31-2013 at 12:49 PM. |
#10
IP: 72.82.114.71
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?????? Not sure I follow..
There were 2 different size,shape heads for the adjuster. Both of my motors are from the 70's and one has a large thin just bolt looking head. The other has a smaller deep looking head. Two different wrench sizes.
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Tyring to keep the Bay's Wooden Boat's history from dying off completely. Daniel |
#11
IP: 76.68.255.63
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Since I did it only once so I'm not too clear on the adjuster.
It threaded inside the lifter and had a nut to keep the adjustment. There was a crown of 1/8" on top of the lifter where I slid a 7/16' or 1/2" spanner on it to work in some play and oil. To pry the lifter up, I used a vice grip with a flat jaw on this crown. I wiggled it, and pryed the vice grip up with a large screw driver, until the lifter was free. Now the engine is in the boat and as a Spring project, I hope to clean out the oil delivery channels to the lifter and bearings I guess, so the problem doesn't happen again. |
#12
IP: 108.176.255.229
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Not quite following you here, Sony -
"While you are there Caerules, could you develop a technique to clean out the channel of oil that feeds the lifters? I believe that just a little lower, there are 3, 1/8npt tapped holes leading to the oil channel. The ones used for the OPSS, and oil pressure sensor, plus one in the middle." While I'm where? Where is the oil channel? A little lower on what? In the valve gallery or underneath by the journals? The valves seem lubed by those 3/4 inch holes down into the crankcase... no? And if they're fatter on the bottom, how can they come out through the top? |
#13
IP: 216.115.121.240
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Now I'm getting it. I removed my lifters out through the bottom because I was doing a complete teardown. It is easier. Good to know one can unscrew the adjuster and remove the lifter from the top. that would be good for repairs on the engine in-situ.
I agree that doing so might shorten the life of the locking screw threads, but I have no experience that it will on an A-4. But, I have seen a few worn out locking threads on auto engines, so it is a concern here. I hope the homebrew penetrant and time will be the solution for you.
__________________
Whiskeyjack a '68 Columbia 36 rebuilt A-4 with 2:1 "Since when is napping doing nothing?" |
#14
IP: 216.115.121.240
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Quote:
Hope that helps. Gotta go to Easter brunch with the in-laws now. I'll check back later. Russ
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Whiskeyjack a '68 Columbia 36 rebuilt A-4 with 2:1 "Since when is napping doing nothing?" |
#15
IP: 76.68.255.63
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....a little lower on the block below the gallery..... In the first picture, one of the tapped holes is front and center with a plug in it.
If the lifter ever experienced a lack of oil, the cam pushing from below, the hollowed out lifter tends to be compress, and it bulges at the bottom. Or, there is an accumulation of sludge with time. Seafoam has a decarbonizing spray sold as a penetrating oil. Good results against carbon build up is achieved with brake cleaning spray. But if it is stuck tight, constant pressure from a pry bar overnight may do the trick. Just make sure the other valve is opening. Put the propane torch to the journal. The heat can weaken the seal. |
#16
IP: 72.82.114.71
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On my block there is no hole in the lifter cylinder-hole, that pressure oils it like cars have.
Oil is basically splash feed from underneath. The bearings for the cam are force feed.
__________________
Tyring to keep the Bay's Wooden Boat's history from dying off completely. Daniel |
#17
IP: 24.152.131.153
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Check the Drawings and Schematics forum category
http://www.moyermarine.com/forums/showthread.php?t=5579
__________________
Neil 1977 Catalina 30 San Pedro, California prior boats 1987 Westsail 32, 1970 Catalina 22 Had my hands in a few others |
#18
IP: 108.176.255.229
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Well, I turned some soft plastic plugs down on my wood lathe and plugged the holes in bottom of the gallery, and then closed it up with the valve cover and poured in around a pint of acetone/ATF mixture in through the hole for the flame arrestor. I also turned the crank by hand a few times. One thing I'm noticing is that with all the lubricants I'm putting all over everywhere it's getting a lot easier to turn. We'll see if the valves are responding a little better tomorrow. I'm keeping the faith.
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#19
IP: 108.176.255.229
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Lifter still won't come out
Bollocks. I've tried all sorts of penetrant solutions (blaster, seafoam, acetone, autotrans fluid... you name it) and still no joy.
So I removed a valve and the adjuster and tried to wiggle one of the lifters up through into the gallery. No luck. It just starts to wobble but tops out on the valve guide above. Hugely frustrating. While it was up I hosed the two visible inches of lifter with mystery oil, blaster and wd40, none of which seemed to make a difference. So I think corrosion is likely not the problem and it must be the lifters themselves. Anything I'm missing? It seems I'll be removing the cam and taking them out through the bottom after all. Somebody please tell me this won't be a difficult job. So the question is - do I buy new lifters or do I take the old ones to a machine shop and have them turned down slightly? Maybe a dumb question, but I've never been this far inside of an engine before. Thanks in advance. |
#20
IP: 67.68.240.150
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For the one lifter that is touching the valve guide, I suggest not trying to push the guide further into the block, but it should be possible to cut off 1/8" without consequences, and out will come the lifter.
This above suggestion is conditional on the possible removal of the second lifter that is swollen. Does the second lifter turn, while jammed up? |
#21
IP: 173.53.22.120
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Wow, lots going on in this thread.
1. Removing the lifters: I suppose it is possible to pull them upwards and out the top, but it would require first removing the valves, which requires a spring compressor to remove the keepers and springs and then pull the valves up and out - which requires removing the head first. AND you also would have to remove the adjusting bolt on top of the lifter. Other than that, my recollection is there is not enough clearance, even with the valves removed, to pull the lifters up and out through the valve cover on the side of the engine. The other way to remove them is to remove the oil pan and pull the cam out of the engine, then drop them down and out the bottom. Either way, it's not a small job. 2. Quote:
The diameter of the lifter should be pretty much the same, top or bottom - it is a cylinder, not a section of a cone. If the bottom of the lifter were fatter than the top, other than by the tiniest of a thousandth of a thousandth of an inch, it would immediately jam in its bore the first time it went up. Now, that last little bit of lifter down at the bottom end can get gummed up, effectively making it "fatter" or at least stickier than the rest of the lifter, and making it stick in the bore. I would think that could be addressed by judicious application of solvents and penetrating lubricants - which, by the way, will end up in your oil pan, so you then will have to thoroughly drain that out and replace with good, fresh oil.
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- Bill T. - Richmond, VA Relentless pursuer of lost causes |
#22
IP: 67.68.240.150
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The second jammed up lifter.
If it can't be rocked back and forth and raised at the same time as I described earlier, then it may have to be sacreficed. Drill a 1/4" hole on its side. Insert a round bar into the hole. Pull up the lifter by hammering the underneath of the bar. This should work. If not! Then with an oxy/acetalene torch, heat up until its red hot and pull it out by hammering upwards on the inserted rod. Going from hot to cold, a can of medical nitrogen sprayed on the lifter, would shrink it, if you choose not to heat it up. Voila. |
#23
IP: 173.53.22.120
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I'm confused by the recommendation to heat the lifter with a torch - heating it will make it expand, and make it tighter in the hole, no?
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- Bill T. - Richmond, VA Relentless pursuer of lost causes |
#24
IP: 70.199.131.161
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second from the right can be move up and down with my fingers.....the rest - up with camshaft, down with a hammer.......working on it
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#25
IP: 108.176.255.229
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more hassles
Yeah, the head is already off, and I can take the valves out with no problems. But the lifters themselves seem like they gotta be fat at the bottom. There's so much oil on them they should have freed up by now. If I could just slide them out that last little bit into the valve gallery and get them out I could put a mic meter on them and see if they're out at all. Am I understanding right that the valve guides themselves can be tapped up higher into the block? Isn't this kind of begging to deform the guide, and wind up with an even bigger set of hassles?
But now I'm wondering if I can get the cam out without removing the crankshaft. Which direction would it come out? And I'm assuming I may need a new camshaft seal pressed into the block afterwards, right? It seems that every way I turn I've got difficulties. And I'm looking at all the bolts. How does one put this engine on a stand? Thanks again for all the help and suggestions... |
Tags |
lifters, sticky, stuck, valve |
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