![]() |
|
|
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
I cleaned the bleed holes, replaced water deflectors, cleaned water passages etc. The head gasket is brand new.
I ran the motor again today and the hot head ran much much cooler. I could hold my hand on it for 10-15 seconds at least if not indefinitly. The water exiting the head was ~ 110 degrees. This was on the hose at about 500-600 rpm, in gear, in a bucket. The cooling water on the hose was @ 80 degrees. The other head was lukewarm and cooling water likewise. I'm not sure why one's hotter than the other but its not overheating. Something else that I didn't think could affect heat this much...but the 'hot' side has one new piston and new rings on both pistons. The other side has the original rings. I honed each cylinder just enough to get the cross hatch back. I added some extra oil for the rings to break it it's about 40:1 right now. Could the extra friction be bringing up the cylinder temps?
__________________
'79 V20 Cuddy, '84 Johnson 140 '88 250 Coastal, twin '88 Johnson 140 '96 F-250 7.3L Powerstroke TD '94 Toyota Pickup 4x4 22re |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
On the hose you will see higher temperature, I on on my V4 looper ..
|
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
nymack right it was fine when i got it out on the water. however, then I discovered another problem. The motor will idle great but when you give it throttle it doesn't rev up much at all, maybe 1800-2000 rpm. The bulb stays hard and the timing is advancing and carbs are opening.. Compressions @ 120 on all four. I'm going to test the spark soon as i get a jump tester
__________________
'79 V20 Cuddy, '84 Johnson 140 '88 250 Coastal, twin '88 Johnson 140 '96 F-250 7.3L Powerstroke TD '94 Toyota Pickup 4x4 22re |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|