Insomniacs!
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
vinigar down my glow plug hole
Collapse
X
-
To the tune of Lonnie Donnegans 'Does your Chewing Gum Lose It's Flavour'
'Does your vinegar go down the plug hole on the engine overnight
If it won't start the next morning will it give you a right fright
If the glow plug still won't come out will you twist it left and right
Does your vinegar go down the plug hole on the engine overnight?'
'Tis better to sting than to be stung!
Comment
-
Originally posted by BUSHWHACKERInsomniacs!
Originally posted by copycatTo the tune of Lonnie Donnegans 'Does your Chewing Gum Lose It's Flavour'
'Does your vinegar go down the plug hole on the engine overnight
If it won't start the next morning will it give you a right fright
If the glow plug still won't come out will you twist it left and right
Does your vinegar go down the plug hole on the engine overnight?'Oh Nana, what's my name?
Comment
-
well the vinigar didnt work.
and to top it off, i lost the wood screw in the engine bay when i tried to cork the plug...
so when i was putting everything back together, i was just screwing on the little nuts i have now to go on top of the glow plugs since the rubbish plastic things broke, and i lost one of them as well..
the truck wasnt too hard to start without the plugs being heated eitherOh Nana, what's my name?
Comment
-
if you have acess to a compressor jam the airline in the injector hole, if you cant lower the pressure a pair of mole grips on the line to give you just enough, if you only have a tyre inflator, squit some oil in the bore, then turn the engine over by hand a couple of times this will give you a good seal around the rings, pop the line into the bore, also make sure the bores on the comp stroke so the valves are closed, good luck hope it works
Comment
-
Vinegar answer for sancho
Being of the older generation of engineers (over 60), Mechanical that is, one picks up tips along the way, such as using vinegar as it is mildly acidic and will eat away little pieces of rust and crap etc without damaging the engine.
Remenber you take vinegar is salad dressing and fish and chips and it does not kill you and it can do no harm to a piece of cast iron.
There are lots of tips that people seem to forget about and I am sure your gran has forgotten more than your mum remembers.
You DO NOT put vinegar IN the engine only round the siezed part or in this case pre heater tip.
No one would EVER advocate puting vinegar IN the engine unless the engine was out and the block stripped and you wanted to Pickle the internals prior to painting it inside as is done on LARGE engines.
If you want to chrome plate anything metal the plating works will pickle the parts before starting the plating process to ensure the metal is 100% clean.
They use various strong acids but given enough time vinegar would do the same if you had a few weeks to wait as it is so mild it would take for ever.
Hope this goes a little way to explain the vinegar thing.
REAGARDS.
Mike
Comment
-
Originally posted by muller1Being of the older generation of engineers (over 60), Mechanical that is, one picks up tips along the way, such as using vinegar as it is mildly acidic and will eat away little pieces of rust and crap etc without damaging the engine.
Remenber you take vinegar is salad dressing and fish and chips and it does not kill you and it can do no harm to a piece of cast iron.
There are lots of tips that people seem to forget about and I am sure your gran has forgotten more than your mum remembers.
You DO NOT put vinegar IN the engine only round the siezed part or in this case pre heater tip.
No one would EVER advocate puting vinegar IN the engine unless the engine was out and the block stripped and you wanted to Pickle the internals prior to painting it inside as is done on LARGE engines.
If you want to chrome plate anything metal the plating works will pickle the parts before starting the plating process to ensure the metal is 100% clean.
They use various strong acids but given enough time vinegar would do the same if you had a few weeks to wait as it is so mild it would take for ever.
Hope this goes a little way to explain the vinegar thing.
REAGARDS.
Mike
before i re-built my race engine, i had it ACID dipped to get all the grease, gunk and crud off the inside and outside. then when i got it back the outside of it was painted. i would have painted the inside as well but at the time i wasnt taught what that did, and it had never crossed my mind. my engine was only a 1.6, but since the cam was in the block and not the head - it had no direct oil feed. so as much oil in the sump as poss was important. i know nothing of marine engines but expect its the same?
thanks for all your PMs, Mike. Im very greatful.
cheers,
tonyOh Nana, what's my name?
Comment
Comment