Hey, I’m back! Strap yourselves in, it’s been a hell of a day....!
It’s been a day when I could have used lots and lots of sweary words , but I’ll spare you that in the interests of brevity.
Started off trying to get the intermediate steering shaft off. I referred very carefully to the WSM – don’t hit anything with a hammer, and push the shaft towards the bulkhead once all the bolts are undone. Ha ha ha ha ha!
I couldn’t figure out what I was doing wrong, but the XXXX thing just wouldn’t shift. Eventually, after just a few gentle taps with a hammer ... I realised that the long set of splines, at the steering box UJ just wasn’t moving enough to give me clearance. So, out came Mr Grinder...!
To be fair to myself, even on the ground, those splines would go no further into the UJ, so cutting it out was the only option. I’m assuming 20 yrs of wear have created a little ridge inside the UJ.
So, manifold out, no great drama, except that the nuts between the manifold and exhaust were a 13mm, a 14mm and a 15mm. How...... entertaining!
Right. Next. Spark plugs. How hard can that be? (Bearing in mind my last 20 years of experience has been on a Defender 300Tdi diesel). On every single plug I had to use a 450mm ½” breaker bar. And, unfortunately, this picture tells its own story (apart from being upside down!).
I did try and use a ‘reverse spiral easy out’ on the broken plug, once I’d dug out all its internals – but to be honest I gave up on that, as I know the heads are coming off anyway, and given how tight all the plugs were in, I thought I was likely to just do more damage.
For those of you more used to spark plugs....
The end of the electrode on the old plugs looks a lot smaller than the new one alongside – have they just eroded over time? Other than that they seem OK to me – pretty consistent, and not fouled.
A set of ‘Champion’ plugs came with the car. Much bigger hex than the old ones - as you can see in the pics. Are these ‘OK’ or should I get something different? Given what’s to follow, the cost of a set of plugs isn’t going to make a lot of difference.....
So, because I’m still waiting for the UK, and the US posties to bring me my new sockets, I couldn’t go any further with the heads, and moved on to the water pump. (I’ll post a separate thread about my new water pump).
The “old” one looks is pretty good nick, I have to say, but I still 100% accept the logic of having a look while I’m here. Though I could probably just clean up the faces and stick this back on.
However (insert lots of sweary words) as soon as I cracked off the first few water pump bolts, I noticed a leak between the front/timing cover and the block. I dived underneath with a torch, just to check that the leak wasn’t simply flowing down that way, but no. The gasket between the timing cover and block is gone. Green line shows the leak – in fact in the orginal uncompressed picture, you can actually see the coolant stream just to the left of the green line.
So, now, having started all of this to try and chase one water leak at the back of the valley gasket, I’m into a tricky head removal, and taking the sump and front cover off.......
Indeed, to get my impact gun onto the crankshaft nut, the radiator will have to come off! At least it’s already empty...
This is where I left it this eve.
I’ve sort of been here before, recently, with the Tdi. So it’s not excessively scary, but I was surprised to see that there were no bolts inside the crankshaft pulley/damper.
I thought there would be some bolts in there, allowing me to attach a tool to lock the pulley while torqueing off the crankshaft nut? (Edit: there are two threaded holes - that's just a rubbish photo)
So, now I’m going to be effectively stripping the engine down to just a short block. It’s certainly giving me good value in the ‘hours in the garage:initial purchase price’ ratio.
If I keep going at this rate, I’ll have the engine out and on the bench by the end of next week.
Having said all of that, it’s probably obvious that I’m not really that bothered. In a perverse way I realise that I’m having to catch up on many, many years of poor or minimal maintenance, and once I’ve done all of this (plus the stuff I’ve already spent many hours on) then I’ll have a car that I’ll be much more confident of mechanically. All the electrickery will be another matter. (but I did unbolt the fusebox today to have a peek underneath, and that at least looks split new.)
And that's about it for now. I might take a day off tomorrow, or pull the radiator out. (FXck! I've only literally just realised that it's not 'just' the radiator that will have to come out on this car, but the oil coolers and AC condenser.... aaargh.)
Please feel free to comment on any of the stuff above – spark plug questions etc.
In addition as I’ll be removing the front cover, what do I do at the same time? Oil pump rotors? Or, given the state of the water pump, and the engine’s 75k miles, are they likely to be pretty good, and I should leave them untouched? Anything else? Radiator looks more or less split new from the inside, and I already have a new serpentine belt and a couple of new jockey pulleys.