oil cooler seals, with engine in the car is easy |
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oil cooler seals, with engine in the car is easy |
sean_v8_914 |
Aug 26 2013, 11:59 PM
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#1
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
crow is tasty this time of year. i should know because this post is me eating some major crow.
changing the oil cooler seals is easy to do without removing the engine. it should take you about an hour if you have some good basic tools like: 13mm wrench, 13mm socket and ratchet-1/4" drive is better, 10mm deep socket 1/4" drive , 10mm wrench, long flat head scerw driver, a pointed scribe remove the oil filter, catch oil drool 1975/76 remove teh heater tins on right side, the one from exchanger to fan housing retract j tube disconnect it first. should have slotted cheese head screws remove speedo cable from trans. pull it out of the way to the fire wall the outboard side of the oil cooler has a bracket that holds it to the fan shroud. 13mm bolt the bracket holds the cooler with a 6mm cheese head , loosen that also to enable bracket to wiggle on end of cooler Attached thumbnail(s) |
sean_v8_914 |
Aug 27 2013, 12:02 AM
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#2
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
move teh cooler forward. this allows the 13mm 1/4" drive socket to fit in teh void of teh oil cooler's chassis
now you can remove teh oil filter attachment. this one was leaking Attached thumbnail(s) |
sean_v8_914 |
Aug 27 2013, 12:05 AM
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#3
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
RTV is evil shizt when used wrong. too much squish into the cavities
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sean_v8_914 |
Aug 27 2013, 12:09 AM
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#4
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
the oil cooler bracket will hang up on teh fan shroud. wiggle it out and away and teh cooler will slide out leaving ample room to CLEAN EVERYTHING WELL.
i plugged teh oil galleys during cleaning Attached thumbnail(s) |
sean_v8_914 |
Aug 27 2013, 12:15 AM
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#5
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
the oil cooler is held to the block with 3 10mm nuts. i used a 10mm gear wrench for teh 2 on teh cooler body and a 10mm deep 1/4" drive for teh single one on teh inboard nose of teh cooler. i put a glop of grease inside teh socket, placed teh socket, then put the ratchet to it. the grease holds it in place
my rachet is an 88 tooth fine. i love this thing Attached thumbnail(s) |
sean_v8_914 |
Aug 27 2013, 12:22 AM
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#6
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
you can glop some grease on teh oil cooler seals so that when you stick them up in there, they stay in place. I use a locktite flange sealant that is non hardening
i put the gooped up seal ont eh end of a scribe. i place it, then push it in with a long flat head. contaminants will cause leaks. your surfaces and insertion tools must be clean, clean, clean!!! Attached thumbnail(s) |
sean_v8_914 |
Aug 27 2013, 12:30 AM
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#7
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
before you slide teh oil cooler back, reinstall teh oil filter adapter . i replaced teh nuts with 12mm wrench size nuts. this makes it easier to get a 1/4" drive 12mm socket on them
teh 2 nuts on teh cooler body are easy, teh one on teh oikl cooler's nose requires you to be more clever than teh nut. i glued it to my finger tip. i placed in on teh tip of teh stud, then placed a 13mm shallow socket with a very small extension to spin it on. i placed another nut inside teh socket to push teh driven nut forward. this extra nut was gooped in place. once teh nut started on teh threads, remove teh extra nut and switch to the deel socket it is easier to place teh socket first, then follow in with the ratchet handle Attached thumbnail(s) |
euro911 |
Aug 27 2013, 12:35 AM
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#8
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Retired & living the dream. God help me if I wake up! Group: Members Posts: 8,857 Joined: 2-December 06 From: So.Cal. & No.AZ (USA) Member No.: 7,300 Region Association: Southern California |
Thanks for confirming that it CAN be done, Sean (IMG:style_emoticons/default/thumb3d.gif)
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sean_v8_914 |
Aug 27 2013, 01:18 AM
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#9
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
i talked so much crap about this and it turned out to be so easy.
yup, i said it. easy. under an hour (on a lift) |
type47 |
Aug 27 2013, 05:30 AM
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#10
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Viermeister Group: Members Posts: 4,254 Joined: 7-August 03 From: Vienna, VA Member No.: 994 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
Dang it! You were able to remove the intermediate flange for the oil filter/oil filter adapter with the engine in the car. I thought that was impossible so I dropped the engine to replace it. You've shown me the way ... (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wacko.gif)
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rick 918-S |
Aug 27 2013, 06:10 AM
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#11
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Hey nice rack! -Celette Group: Members Posts: 20,730 Joined: 30-December 02 From: Now in Superior WI Member No.: 43 Region Association: Northstar Region |
Nice write up Sean! I nominate this for Classic status! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/aktion035.gif)
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sean_v8_914 |
Aug 28 2013, 07:39 AM
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#12
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Chingon 601 Group: Members Posts: 4,011 Joined: 1-February 05 From: San Diego Member No.: 3,541 |
it is very easy
I told my customer we needed to drop the engine to fix the leak that made his teener into a Bond car. he is bummed out. as an experiment, i went in and fixed it just to see how it would go. the best part is that now I get to tell him its fixed for under $100 bucks. its not often that I get to tell a 914 owner good news. cant wait to see the look on his face |
euro911 |
Aug 28 2013, 10:10 PM
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#13
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Retired & living the dream. God help me if I wake up! Group: Members Posts: 8,857 Joined: 2-December 06 From: So.Cal. & No.AZ (USA) Member No.: 7,300 Region Association: Southern California |
I second the nomination (IMG:style_emoticons/default/beerchug.gif)
I've looked into trying to do it several times and it looked like it COULD be done, but never did attempt it (yet). I can see that having a lift would make it more pleasant. I recently had to replace a leaking fuel hose on the Westy - had to lift it 'up & down' several times to get it at the multiple heights it took to reach everything (IMG:style_emoticons/default/shades.gif) |
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