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-   -   Pulled off the head, need advice on next steps (https://www.moyermarineforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=4436)

theredboat 08-19-2010 08:50 PM

Pulled off the head, need advice on next steps
 
5 Attachment(s)
Hi All,

It took about a week of spray-spray tap-tap, but I finally got my head off in order to replace it with a used head I got from MM.

I'm not an experienced mechanic so I'm looking for some feedback on these images I took.

1. It looks to me like the valve on cyl 3 is stuck in the closed position. How do I open that?

2. Whats the best/safest way to remove all the gunk from the head and inside the cylinders. Most of this is gasket material from prying up the head.

3. The studs you see in their posts....Can i just keep these in when I put the new head on? The ones that came out are studs that got removed along with their nuts. I'm going to replace these.

4. It appears that there is some stuff stuck down inside the valve of cyl 1. Any way to get at that stuff without removing the valves?

lat 64 08-19-2010 09:35 PM

Did you mean to say the valve is stuck closed? Usually the valves stick open and the spring can't close it.
If your valve is stuck in the closed position, then somethings really broken down in the camshaft. Can you turn the motor over with a hand crank and watch the valves to see if they move up.
Gentle scraping and a shop vac to suck up the goo from that mess. Don't scrape in to the base metal; cast iron is soft compared to paint knifes and scraper blades.
Get it clean enough to eat off of and you will be close.

Russ

sastanley 08-19-2010 10:31 PM

Hi trb,

You need to clean everything. Do not under any circumstances put the motor back together with all that gunk in there.

I know you don't want to hear that, but it is my strong opinion that you clean it up. You can likely use a shop vac to get the loose chunks, and then even use a hose & soapy water...there is nothing wrong with doing that to a metal block...as long as you thoroughly dry it (grab the wife's hairdryer!!) & don't store it wet or with bare metal exposed to the atmosphere. Maybe a nice light coating of MMO would be good too so that moisture doesn't damage exposed metal before re-assembly or wrap it in oil soaked bath towels, etc.

Kelly 08-20-2010 03:50 AM

Studs
 
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Red,

When pulling the head off my A4, several studs remained in place. I left them where they were and had no trouble reassembling and torquing the nuts as per the Moyer manual instructions.

Be sure to clean out all those cooling water passages as the others have stressed. I'm assuming a saltwater cooled engine here. Might I suggest the fresh water cooling upgrade? My FWC engine was MUCH cleaner when I opened it up. This is what it looked like when I pulled the head. You can still see pieces of the old gasket (notice the studs I left in place):

Kelly 08-20-2010 03:52 AM

...and the head
 
1 Attachment(s)
Here is another picture just for comparison:

Seabee Chief 08-20-2010 07:56 AM

Been there!
 
Hi trb,
Having been there a couple months ago, I totally agree with the recent threads. After diagoising the blown head gasket we decided we needed to remove the head. I also cannot over stress the importance of cleaning EVERYTHING! DO NOT RE-ASSEMBLE the head without cleaning everything. We used engine cleaner, scrapers, water spray gun and anything we could to punch out the waterjackets. All the water jackets need to be flushed out in the block and also the head. Don't forget the thermostat. I just cleaned mine, tested it and put it back. You can replace it if you think you need to. Prior to removing the head, mine was so clogged that my temp sensor was giving us a false reading. After a good cleaning it work great! I also left my studs in the block against the MM Overhaul & Repair recommendation and everything torqued up fine. Be sure the threads are clean so up get an accurate torque setting. Chase them if necessary. Be sure to use the two gaskets supplied by MM. Remember clean is key.
Good luck,

Chief :)

dthibaul 08-20-2010 02:49 PM

Studs
 
One minor suggestion I would make subject to the disagreement of others. Since you have gone this far, I'd replace all of the remaining studs (if you can remove them w/o breaking them). The studs that did come out-what did the lower threads look like? Diminished or missing? Studs nuts/bolts/washers are inexpensive. I like to replace them when I can (and bundle them into the same shipping charge from MM).

dvd 08-20-2010 04:28 PM

Yikes, I Hope mine doesnt look like that. I think now that you have it apart you need to spend alot of time completely cleaning it up. Also, its good advice to try and turn over the engine and make sure the valves are opening. As mentioned if one of them is stuck closed it probably means something is wrong with the cam lobes or possibly a broken cam? If the valves are opending then you must spend time of just cleaning everything. If you can get the studs out WITHOUT breaking them it would be great. Good luck on it,

dvd

Al Schober 08-20-2010 08:52 PM

At this point in the disassembly, I'd remove ALL the valves, clean them, inspect them, and have them ground in a shop if at all doubtful. Not expensive.
Then I'd use valve grinding compound and lap them into their seats in the block. A shop would use the proper tools to contour the valve seats and control their width. I've never felt it necessary to have this done, or to buy the tools to do it. To see what would be required, do a Google on Goodson Tools - browsing their catalog is an education by itself!

Al

theredboat 08-21-2010 11:42 PM

getting there
 
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thanks so much for all the advice!

well, ive done quite a bit of cleaning. wondering how much more i have left. This is about a days worth...

There are some pieces of gasket still left, though it seems to be incredibly thin. Plastic scaper doesnt get it of, nor does a soft wire brush. im worried that I may damage the surface by chiseling it.

Also, a strange (bad?) thing happened as I was cleaning around one of the valves. It sprang closed. You can see it in the picture. Both the first cyl valves are close and the second cyl valves. Will it pop back up next time I crank the the engine? Not sure how to proceed. I dont have the hand crank.

I did remove the plate under the manifold to inspect the valves, everything looked OK with the exception of one of the springs which looked slightly damaged.

hanleyclifford 08-22-2010 08:12 AM

The "springing" closed of the valve is a good thing. It was stuck open. Before you go any further prepare a wooden block with individual holes so that as you disassemble, each valve and its related parts can later go back exactly where it came from. You can complete the cleaning of the block surface with a single edge razor blade or similar tool.

rigspelt 08-22-2010 08:19 AM

3 Attachment(s)
Interesting puzzle for a non-mechanic like me to try to work out over a morning coffee: A hand crank would be the slickest way to see how the valves are working in that engine I suppose, but let me try a prediction based on logic.

I made the attached drawings when I was trying to figure out how an A4 works, and then used them to label your original photo, presuming exhaust valves are smaller than intake valves (I see the distributor in the background, which is how I numbered them). I think I got them right. Ref: http://www.moyermarine.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2927

Russ and Hanley confirmed that valves usually stick open. In your original post, the open valves were E1, E3 and I4, if I figured this out right. On cleaning, the #1 exhaust valve snapped shut, as if it had been stuck open maybe?

If I remember my self-taught mechanics right, 4-stroke engine cylinder's four strokes are (http://www.moyermarine.com/forums/sh...92&postcount=6) Compression, power (fires), exhaust, intake:

Up - compression, both valves closed
Down - power, both valves closed
Up - exhaust, exhaust valve open
Down - intake, intake valve open

The A4 fires 1-2-4-3, which means the following situation at an instant in time when #1 is in its power stroke:

1 - power, is firing now, both valves closed.
2 - compression, so will fire next (compression, power), both valves closed.
4 - intake, so will fire after #2 (intake, compression, power), intake valve open.
3 - exhaust since just fired, so will fire after #4 (exhaust, intake, compression, power), exhaust valve open.

This is the situation now for that engine, if that first valve had simply been stuck open:

E1 closed
I1 closed
So #1 is in its power stroke and is firing (power).

I2 closed
E2 closed
So #2 is in its compression stroke and will fire next after #1 (compression, power).

E3 open
I3 closed
So #3 is in its exhaust stroke and will fire after #4 (exhaust, intake, compression, power).

I4 open
E4 closed
So #4 is in its intake stroke and will fire after #2 (intake, compression, power).

So, if I have all this right, here is my prediction for that engine now:
1 - power, both valves closed, and the piston should be on its way down.
2 - compression, both valves closed, and the piston should be on its way up.
3 - exhaust, E3 open, and the piston should be on its way up.
4 - intake, I4 open, and the piston should be on its way down.

Right??? Your photo of the pistons here here seems consistent with my guesswork.
---

hanleyclifford 08-22-2010 08:39 AM

Rigspelt - After that incredible detailed analysis you should stop calling yourself a "non" mechanic. Truly impressive and useful for this issue. Your discussion reinforces the requirement for care and orderliness as disassembly proceeds. Next we should see a picture of the valves, in order, before cleaning begins. After that the valves can be cleaned on bench wire brush. Then another picture, clean valves in order. After that, calipers on the stems...but let's not get too far ahead of ourselves. Regards, Hanley

alberg 08-22-2010 10:34 AM

Just logged in after a long summer. Looking at the photo,s and I would recomend replacing all of the studs as the threads look very thin. Also for me after seeing the extent I would pull the engine and do a complete rebuild. Doing half a job may be a diservise to a good old engine.

John
Alberg30

theredboat 08-22-2010 10:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rigspelt (Post 25989)
Interesting puzzle for a non-mechanic like me to try to work out over a morning coffee: A hand crank would be the slickest way to see how the valves are working in that engine I suppose, but let me try a prediction based on logic.
---


Wow, thanks a lot for that! Very kind of you to take the time out to show me what you've already learned. It's all making sense now.

... Now the debate begins. Clean up as much as possible, replace a few studs, pack up and still get a month of sailing? Or Haul the engine?

Eh... There's always next year for the engine haul out! I need to sail!

theredboat 08-22-2010 11:14 AM

Crank?
 
By the way - is there a way to crank the engine without using the crank tool supplied by moyer?

my problem is that in my boat there is plenty of clearance to port, stbd and aft of the engine, but only about an inch of clearance forward of the flywheel. I really want to manually crank the engine to inspect the valves as they move through each stroke, but not sure how to accomplish this with my situation.

ArtJ 08-22-2010 12:01 PM

If you are in neutral, you can either turn the salt water pump pto belt,
if freshwater cooled, or turn the output shaft, probably more diffcult.

Art

rigspelt 08-22-2010 04:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by theredboat (Post 25994)
By the way - is there a way to crank the engine without using the crank tool supplied by moyer?my problem is that in my boat there is plenty of clearance to port, stbd and aft of the engine, but only about an inch of clearance forward of the flywheel. I really want to manually crank the engine to inspect the valves as they move through each stroke, but not sure how to accomplish this with my situation.

Can you cut an access hole in the obstruction in front of the flywheel?

theredboat 08-22-2010 05:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ArtJ (Post 25996)
If you are in neutral, you can either turn the salt water pump pto belt,
if freshwater cooled, or turn the output shaft, probably more diffcult.

Art

This worked great! Excellent tip. Using this technique I was able to confirm te valves are now all working properly!

sastanley 08-23-2010 12:35 PM

rigs, thanks for re-posting those excellent diagrams. When I adjusted my valves this spring, I had your diagram printed out and I was keeping notes under each one as I dialed in the 0.010" or 0.012" clearance! :D

I agree with Hanley..I know you always use the disclaimer about not being a mechanic, but you are much more thorough than many of us, you take time to analyze and diagram (saving me lots of time! :D) and may very well be learning yourself a new trade!

My neighbor and I refer to ourselves as 'shade tree mechanics', because we are usually in the front yard sitting under a tree with a beer trying to figure out how to keep one of our respective engines running a little longer..today he is bringing his Camaro over to charge the A/C system so he can sell it. I have to buy more beer on the way home. :p

trb - I have a Catalina 30 and there is no room in front either (the engine sits in a fiberglass box in the middle of the boat) - I cut a hole in the front that was big enough to get the crank thru in the event I ever need to hand start..I decided the $50 crank was cheaper (and lighter!) than carrying a spare starter & I can use it for turning the motor over for MMO treatments, timing & valves, etc. etc.

Seabee Chief 08-23-2010 03:34 PM

Looking better
 
TRB,
Wow, what a great tread. A wealth of information from many experienced A4 mechanics. The engine is looking better than your first pics. Don't forget, if your want your engine to operate at it's proper temp, you need to clear all those water jackets in the block. It looks better, but I still see crud in all the pockets. Also be sure to flush the head out good and check the flatness of the head with a straight edge. Your studs look in the same condition as mine when we removed our head. It's a 50/50 shot if one will break or not when you torque down the head. We got lucky and they all torqued fine. If you have the time replace them, if not roll the bones and take yuor chances. Worst that will happen is one will snap and you will have to remove the head and replace them all anyway.
Good luck,

Chief

theredboat 08-24-2010 11:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Seabee Chief (Post 26068)
Don't forget, if your want your engine to operate at it's proper temp, you need to clear all those water jackets in the block. It looks better, but I still see crud in all the pockets. Also be sure to flush the head out good and check the flatness of the head with a straight edge.

Yes, you're right. I need to do a bit more with the water jackets. I'll try the coat hanger approach. Also, I bought a used head from MM, which I had re-conditioned at a shop. They flattened it, cleaned the hell out of it (the water jackets of the one I got from MM were filled with rust when I got it), and re-threaded the hole for the temp sensor. All that for $40. Definitely worth it.

I spent another 8 hours with a razor blade and got the block side much much cleaner. After getting the water jackets cleaned out, I'll feel much better about putting the head back on.

I'll report back soon. Thanks again for all the tips everyone.


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