After replacing my oil cooler seals with the engine in the car (quite a PIA, btw!), I discovered that the source of my oil leak was that the PO had JB welded the oil pressure switch in place because of stripped threads
I cleaned it, re-JB welded it, and the leak has stopped (there's actually enough thread there to maintain an electrical contact, just not enough to hold the switch in). Now I know this isn't a permanent fix, so I'm weighing my options here.
I don't have experience drilling and tapping threads, so if I went that route I'd have to pay a shop to do it, and it would likely require splitting the case to do so, right? Which at that point I may as well have the engine rebuilt, and the dollars start piling up.
The other option…I found an engine a couple hours drive from me for $850. I contacted the seller and this is what he told me: It's a stock 1.8 case, stock cam, but the pistons and cylinders are 96mm instead of
the 94mm stock. The engine was totally rebuilt. The rod bearings are
0.10, standard mains, standard on the cam shaft. The heads were rebuild
with ground valves, new seats, guides, and springs. Engine has a few hundred miles on it, and was rebuilt a year ago.
Apparently the guy was using it for his car while his 2.0 was being built up to a 2.3 so it was an "in the meantime" engine for him.
I've got a 1.7 with Djet. Is there any reason why my Djet wouldn't work with the larger displacement engine? (Still new to Djet, sorry if that's a dumb question!)
Do you guys think that price is pretty good? It sounds like it'd be easier to pop a new engine in rather than disassembling the engine to have it tapped for new threads.
If it were me, I would use a time-sert and fix the hole.
http://www.timesert.com/html/taperpipe.html
Those threads go a lot deeper than the typical pressure switch threads in.
You might be able to clean the threads & JB weld in one of these:
https://www.pegasusautoracing.com/productdetails.asp?RecID=55
Then the pressure switch would thread into that.
If you dont get good electrical contact after the repair, you could attach a wire & ground it.
I would drill, tap, and timesert. Shove a piece of paper towel in the hole and use grease on the drill bit, and tap. That will catch most of the shavings. Then pull the paper towel out with a pair of thermostats. If a small piece of shaving does get in the system, your not any worse off than now.
Sounds like one of those oil pressure interfaces that got a 1/8 NPT at some point in its life ....
If you use grease to lube the tap for the thread insert, it will be a lot easier to keep track of the chips. You can use a thin hose and a wet dry vac to draw out most, if not all the chips during and the after fact. If you use grease the chips should not flow down much, just clean the tap plenty as you go along.
Thanks guys, I'd like to give that a try….but...
After reading through several threads on here, I'm now wholly confused about the thread size. With the timesert I'd be drilling the case for 1/8 NPT, but some people are saying the threads in the case are 10x1.0 straight thread, others are saying they're tapered on the case. And there's a general non-consensus about the thread size of the switch.
Is there a definitive answer to any of this?
Also, any opinions on the engine I mentioned in the original post?
What insert you will use, depends on what thread the 'fitting' is that you plan on installing into the insert. I would not worry much what it was supposed to be, if you are going to use 1/8" NPT
I used a 10mm X 1.0 straight thread to 1/8NPT adapter like from the link I posted.
I think you could fix it that way without the JB weld, but I would have to see the damage.
The adapter will thread in ~10 threads while my guess is that you only have ~3 damaged.
The brass piece you see peeking up out of the engine tin is the adapter I am talking about.
And I did use a crush washer.
Looks good! ..... if the thread damage is not too bad, maybe the threads can be chased or cleaned up with a 10mm x 1.0 standard tap. Then install a setup like stugray's
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