Automotive Repair

Truck Engine Repair

Advice For Engine Rebuilding

Material :

  • masking tape
  • a pen with permanent ink
  • spiral notebook
  • zip-top sandwich bags
Procedure :

  1. First, clean the engine thoroughly.

  2. As each component is removed, clean everything and place that component's hardware and associated small parts in a zip-top bag and label the bag.

  3. Some parts need to go back in the same place they came from, like rockers and push rods. Use a 2X8 board with nails driven through and set rocker arms over the nails. Holes drilled part way through the board in front of each nail store the corresponding putrid and lifter.

  4. Rod and main bearings go in individual zip-top bags with their corresponding caps and bolts.

  5. Shelve the parts and hardware in the order they were removed.

  6. If a gasket is destroyed during disassembly, note the need for a new one in the notebook. Leaving out gaskets is a common occurrence.

  7. Thus organized, you can work your way down the tables, reworking some components, selecting others for a trip to the machine shop. While waiting for your machined parts to be done, why not install brushes in the alternator and starter and rebuild the carb just to prevent any future problems? A can or 2 of engine paint really is worth the cost.

  8. Replace all the vacuum lines as a matter of course, especially if the truck is over 5 years old.

  9. As you collect replacement parts, carefully match them with the old parts to make sure you have the right ones. Then label the new parts just as the old parts are labeled. Do not try to transfer labels from the old parts to the new.

  10. New parts are kept in their original packages until time to reassemble

  11. Oil, coolant, assembly lube, gasket sealers, Loc-Tite, etc., all need to be on the tables. People start rebuilt engines without oil and/or coolant. It is easy to overlook something when the project is nearing completion and the adrenaline kicks in.

  12. Assembly is just working backwards through your notebook and down the tables. The time you use keeping everything recorded, labeled, and organized will more than be made up by the time you save digging through piles of parts looking for that certain bolt, if you even remember you need a certain bolt. All your wires, cables, hoses, brackets, etc., will be hooked up correctly, possibly saving hours or even days of trying to troubleshoot a misplaced vacuum line.

  13. Once the truck is running properly, throw away all the old parts and clean up your work area.






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