Author Topic: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild  (Read 21654 times)

Offline MrDavo

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #90 on: September 24, 2016, 02:14:31 PM »
Aagh! I tracked my shells from Japan to Manchester, today I got a latter from ParcelFarce, who have my package in there Manchester depot, but want me to pay £62 in duty, Vat and their extortionate £13.50 collection charge.

Today I have been mostly wet and drying my cam cover, I'd previously had a go at polishing it but that vapour blasted matt look is damned hard to get rid of in all the nooks and crannies. Later it'll get another dose of the polishing mop, I realised that if  haven't done this stuff when the shells come, it's just going to hold the job up.

Later I might whip the valves out to see what the seats are like, and there's still plenty of well and truly stuck on delaminated head gasket to carefully scrape away at. I got some Loctite gasket shifter, but it doesn't seem to penetrate that deep, and I don't want to start scoring it with a knife in case I gouge the alloy.
1969 Honda CL450 'Scrambler'
1974 Kawasaki Z1A
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Offline MarkCR750

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #91 on: September 24, 2016, 02:31:33 PM »
Jeez £62 how's much did the shells cost?
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Offline MrDavo

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #92 on: September 24, 2016, 03:54:39 PM »
It came to about £200 including carriage with the 10 main bearing shells, 8 big end shells, the crank oil seal, and I also stupidly added a set of 4 rubber float chamber gaskets in too, only later did I realise I'd paid way over the odds for these,  trying to avoid the silly cost of buying the gaskets as a part of 4 'rebuild kits'.
1969 Honda CL450 'Scrambler'
1974 Kawasaki Z1A
2005 Harley XL1200R Sportster
1985 Porsche 911 3.2 Carrera Sport
1978 VW Bay Window camper van

Offline MarkCR750

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #93 on: September 24, 2016, 04:13:16 PM »
Seems a huge percentage of the cost of the parts, still that's the treasury I guess, legalised robbery.
Suzuki GT250A (Nostalgia)
1977 K7 CR750 (lookalike, what of I’m not sure)
Ducati 900SS (Soul & Speed)
Ducati M900 Monster (Handling & character)
Thruxton 1200 (suits me)
James Captain 197 (pure adrenaline, i.e. no brakes!)
"Eff yir gitten awvestear yir gooin te farst"
Sir J.Stewart.

Offline hairygit

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #94 on: September 24, 2016, 04:30:32 PM »
Unfortunately as soon as goods from outside the E.U valued at £15 or more, import duty becomes payable, then V.A.T. on the goods value AND the p&p costs, plus parcel farce's rip off fee on top.
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Offline Seabeowner

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #95 on: September 24, 2016, 04:51:18 PM »
Goods over £135 attract a whole variety of different rates for different goods from different countries. It's a minefield. Best to try to stick under the £135 if you can and then it's just VAT and admin.
Mind you I have had two deliveries from Cruzinimage recently and both slipped through unnoticed. But I've always had to pay when it's come from the US.
Phil
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Online AshimotoK0

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #96 on: September 24, 2016, 05:02:54 PM »
You will always pay the duty if you buy from Yamiya as they are squeaky clean on customs declaration that's why I always get my 'man in Japan' Chris  to ship them for me. Lets face it a lot of those parts look like they are probably worth 2 quid in value not 200.
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

Offline MrDavo

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #97 on: October 02, 2016, 09:23:42 PM »
I may have to take you up on that if I bugger any of them up, at least now I know I got the right shells. The day started well with plastiguaging the shells, I used green first but it squeezed to wide, another go with the red I should've used first, I got it to be 1.5 thou clearance imperial, .038 mill, within the manufacturing tolerance.

It ended up being a mixed day. The first knockback was finding the metal ring around the oil seal in the middle was well and truly stuck, ill take it round to the engineer bikers I know before I damage something.

The second knockback is far more serious- I didn't really appreciate that its one thing to undo the conrods in site with the barrels still on, another to get the caps back on without pushing the bolts up the rods, let alone start the nuts on the threads, all the time trying not to damage the expensive new shells. Suddenly I'm not convinced it's possible but I'll keep trying. I've got the two central rods on and tight, but I'm close but no cigar with the outside pair, I'll have another bash tomorrow.
1969 Honda CL450 'Scrambler'
1974 Kawasaki Z1A
2005 Harley XL1200R Sportster
1985 Porsche 911 3.2 Carrera Sport
1978 VW Bay Window camper van

Offline MrDavo

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #98 on: October 03, 2016, 11:38:24 PM »
Well that was a disaster.

I managed to get the rods attached to the crank, lubed all the shells and put the cases together, all fine. Torqued up the main bolts around the crank, as I did when I plastiguaged (bear in mind I couldn't turn the crank then or I'd have ruined the plasticine) and guess what.

It's locked up solid.  :( I opened it up again to see if any shells had moved or overlapped but no. I tried again, all moves until you nip up the first bolts, the 2 long center ones under the crank, then all was solid again.

I think I need professional help.

ETA: just a thought before I throw in the towel - I used lashings of redline assembly compound on the crank journals - given that the clearance was only 1.5 thou, could it be that the goop can't escape sideways and is causing a hydraulic lock when tightened up. Wishful thinking maybe but I could try again with most of it wiped off.
« Last Edit: October 04, 2016, 12:26:44 AM by MrDavo »
1969 Honda CL450 'Scrambler'
1974 Kawasaki Z1A
2005 Harley XL1200R Sportster
1985 Porsche 911 3.2 Carrera Sport
1978 VW Bay Window camper van

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #99 on: October 04, 2016, 01:02:40 AM »
Hmm sounds like you are having fun Dave. The crank I sold you definitely turned over OK in the engine it came out of and the main bearing shells all looked great. Have you tried lubricating the bearings and placing the crank in each half individually and rotating slowly to check that nothing is fouling?  Also have you checked that you have matching top and bottom halves ( 2 halves should have the same stampings / markings top and bottom). I smell a bit of a rat that your original shells picked up so badly as it's very rare for shells to wear down almost to the copper like your original ones did, even if the wrong shells had been fitted. The 4-cyl 70's Honda crankcases are line bored in production so you can't mix top and bottom halves from other engines, like you can with Honda twins. Could it be that it's had chain damage and somebody has fitted another crankcase half?
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #100 on: October 04, 2016, 08:33:48 AM »
Adding to my earlier post ..in a situation like this I would post the detail of your issues on the USA site ... problem is on there that you can easily get your post buried because of the no. of posts, so keep adding your own replies or 'bumps'. Then if you don't get a response / solution  after a few days, PM Hondaman with a link to your post. He usually responds by adding to the post and not a direct PM, which is the correct thing to do, as everyone benefits..... of course there is also Bryan, Trigger & Oddjob on here , who were in the trade and know a lot more than the likes of me.
« Last Edit: October 04, 2016, 08:35:55 AM by AshimotoK0 »
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

Offline Trigger

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #101 on: October 04, 2016, 08:47:55 AM »
Have you measured up the crank to make sure it is straight ? Can't remember how far you are away from me, as I find it hard to give a 100% comment without it in front of me.

Offline MrDavo

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #102 on: October 04, 2016, 12:40:05 PM »
Thanks for your comments, I don't want to ask our American cousins just yet, from past experience with US car forums, they'd probably turn it into an oil thread :) I have read the relevant bits of Hondaman's book very carefully, though.

FWIW I have a theory, though its going to be hard to prove / measure.

I was thinking, like Ash, that the cases might not be a matching pair and so the line boring is screwed up.  However, both are stamped at the back with an 'M4', are there any other marks that would appear top and bottom?

It's too much of a coincidence that I got a freshly rebuilt engine, everything inside like new, with completely FUBAR mains shells, and absolutely nothing else wrong. Replace shells, torque it up and its solid. Maybe someone, a long time ago in South Africa, got to that stage before and either 'made' it turn with a big bar on the crank nut, or slackened things off a bit and flogged it quick, or even just trailered it to shows or stored it from then on.

As far as I can see the crank is straight and central, I just unipped the crankcase bolts , freeing it up again, and turned the motor over with a ratchet on the stator nut. As I did, I watched the crank at the ignition end turning perfectly in its new oil seal - if anything were bent you'd expect a slight wobble, and I trust Ash's judgment. It all turns over lovely until that last nip up to 18ft lbs.

Here's my theory. Remember how we were surprised that there's no oil stains, or any sign of that yellowish coating that the cases usually have? Well its ALL been blasted inside, we don't know with what media, but it was agressive ( it turned the polished forks and engine cases matt and rough to the touch -I Just read that vapour blasting doesn't, but IDK) INCLUDING the mating surfaces where the crank cases meet, AND where the crank journals are, look here:





Stupid muppets, that's a precision surface you ruined, critical to the fit of a crankshaft that is fitted to half a thou tolerances! IIRC that includes the bearing housings as well, I have no photos with the shells out, and its another teardown to look, but I will.

here's what we should have - a machined surface done at the same time as the crankcase mating sufaces, BEFORE the cases are line bored for the crank.



The perfectly circular line bored holes now aren't, if metal is removed at the join by media blasting they will become ever so slightly egg shaped - fine front to back but tight top to bottom. When I plastiguaged the mains I did it at 45 degrees to see clearly, I may get a different result at the top, I may have another go with a few threads in different places to see if the fit varies.

It would also explain why the mains were 100% toast but the rod bearings were fine, which was totally unexpected for an oil supply failure.

If this this the case (no pun intended) shimming wouldn't work, if you got the clearance right the case's mating surfaces would leak like a sieve. Re line boring by a precision engineer could work though, it needs to be 39.000mm, I don't see why the horizontal measurement would have changed for the worse, and if the cases are a tad closer together the other measurements can only have reduced.

The only other solution would be to find a good second hand set of K1 cases. There are later ones on eBay, but I'd be very wary of the subtle changes to the cylinders and gearbox in later models causing more hassle down the line.

The best course of action is to strip it down and try to measure the holes for round, whatever I do the huge elephant in the room is the fact that the barrels won't come off - they're going to have to whether they like it or not, only God knows how!
« Last Edit: October 04, 2016, 12:52:41 PM by MrDavo »
1969 Honda CL450 'Scrambler'
1974 Kawasaki Z1A
2005 Harley XL1200R Sportster
1985 Porsche 911 3.2 Carrera Sport
1978 VW Bay Window camper van

Offline Trigger

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #103 on: October 04, 2016, 01:07:14 PM »
The numbers to match the crank case are a letter then 1,2 or 3 numbers (C190) as a example, these are located on the flat surface at the back.
When you have turned the crank, has it marked the shells in any way ?

Offline MrDavo

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Re: Oil pressure issue / motor rebuild
« Reply #104 on: October 04, 2016, 01:41:04 PM »
That might work Oddjob, I'll try it. There is the matter of the lower part of the rods being in the way, though, as the rods and pistons won't come out (in either direction) without the barrels being off (I have tried). It does sound doable with careful preparation though.

I've been (instead of doing some work) reading up horror stories such as a guy who had an vintage aircraft engine blasted (and saved by re-engineering, including line boring, but they are *&%$ expensive things) of course with those if you later break down you don't just walk home, you fall out of the sky first.

I just found this nugget - oh deep joy!

Quote
That being said, I will caution against it for a more unlikely reason: future disassembly. A matte surface will bond with well over double the bonding force of a smooth surface. If you've ever removed a 20-year-old gasket from a machine, you know it's a bear to do. Cleaning the surfaces afterward is cumbersome at best. You make those mating surfaces matte prior to assembly and I would dare say those pieces are bonded for life.

  :'( :'( :'(
« Last Edit: October 04, 2016, 01:51:35 PM by MrDavo »
1969 Honda CL450 'Scrambler'
1974 Kawasaki Z1A
2005 Harley XL1200R Sportster
1985 Porsche 911 3.2 Carrera Sport
1978 VW Bay Window camper van

 

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