rlwm211
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First of all, I would like to acknowledge many people for their sharing of their experiences in doing the head gaskets and also specifically CRANETRUCK a.k.a. Bjorn for his pioneering efforts in understanding and properly maintaining a Multifuel engine. Bjorn was out there long before most of us were even thinking of buying a deuce and he has shared willingly his knowledge and experiences and in no way am I trying to replace his hard work and information he has relayed to all of us.
We had discovered that my deuce with the LDS engine was leaking oil out of the head gasket along the front and side of the heads. I never had a loss of coolant into the oil in my engine before we started the repair work. At the time we began repairs, the engine only had 160 hours on it.
JATONKA did the job for me in his shop. We drained the block and radiator and lost a very small amount of coolant. The oil filters were removed to improve access to the Head Studs and Nuts and the injector lines. As expected the nuts on the drivers side were a pain to remove. You definitely need the short special tool to do this IMHO. There was a smooth operating chain fall which made removing and installing the heads later a snap and I would not want to do this job without some sort of overhead lift.
Once the heads were off, we discovered that one of the fire rings had embedded itself in the head. I will go into more detail on the machine shop and the work done further on. The gaskets that were on the truck were the new style gaskets.
It is likely that the gasket problem along with the leaking of oil is due to over-fueling this truck. The excessive pressures in the combustion chambers simply were too much for the gasket to contain. I am very thankful that there was no coolant leakage into the motor. The combustion chambers and the pistons all looked like they were burning cleanly and properly and also evenly. I had never adjusted the IP and had bypassed the FDC.
Overall, it took about 2 full days to tear it apart and reassemble it including cleaning and prepping all gasket surfaces. We disassembled the turbo from the manifold (checked the free play and it was in great shape) and drilled the exhaust manifold for an EGT gauge probe. We used a magnet on inside the manifold to catch the drill shards. We also flushed out the manifold to ensure we would not have metal bits passing through the turbo. A bung for an additional EGT probe (Post turbo) was welded into the elbow that connects to the outlet of the turbo while it was off the truck..
The Machine shop reported that the heads would have to be milled to take care of the fire ring damage and to smooth them up. They milled the heads roughly 5 thousandths. The shop did a great job and also ground the valves an equal amount so the compression would be the same, the engine better balanced power wise and clearances would remain adequate. Both heads had issues of this nature and there was one broken stud for the water manifold which they fixed as well. Turnaround time was a little over a day; Fantastic!!!
After final assembly, we installed the pre-turbo EGT and I performed a test drive to see how the truck ran. As we thought the truck is making too much power. It was too easy to run the temps up to the limit we had decided upon and actually I had to lift off the throttle to keep the EGTs down. This is on the pre-turbo EGT. For testing purposes we decided to not go over 1100F pre-turbo on the EGT. After the test drive we tightened a couple of clamps and added about a quart of coolant and I headed home, 100 miles away.
From the outset of planning this repair we planned a testing program with the use of two K-Type thermocouple EGT gauges to see how much of a temperature drop there is in the pre-post turbo locations and this thread will continue as the testing moves forward.
RL
We had discovered that my deuce with the LDS engine was leaking oil out of the head gasket along the front and side of the heads. I never had a loss of coolant into the oil in my engine before we started the repair work. At the time we began repairs, the engine only had 160 hours on it.
JATONKA did the job for me in his shop. We drained the block and radiator and lost a very small amount of coolant. The oil filters were removed to improve access to the Head Studs and Nuts and the injector lines. As expected the nuts on the drivers side were a pain to remove. You definitely need the short special tool to do this IMHO. There was a smooth operating chain fall which made removing and installing the heads later a snap and I would not want to do this job without some sort of overhead lift.
Once the heads were off, we discovered that one of the fire rings had embedded itself in the head. I will go into more detail on the machine shop and the work done further on. The gaskets that were on the truck were the new style gaskets.
It is likely that the gasket problem along with the leaking of oil is due to over-fueling this truck. The excessive pressures in the combustion chambers simply were too much for the gasket to contain. I am very thankful that there was no coolant leakage into the motor. The combustion chambers and the pistons all looked like they were burning cleanly and properly and also evenly. I had never adjusted the IP and had bypassed the FDC.
Overall, it took about 2 full days to tear it apart and reassemble it including cleaning and prepping all gasket surfaces. We disassembled the turbo from the manifold (checked the free play and it was in great shape) and drilled the exhaust manifold for an EGT gauge probe. We used a magnet on inside the manifold to catch the drill shards. We also flushed out the manifold to ensure we would not have metal bits passing through the turbo. A bung for an additional EGT probe (Post turbo) was welded into the elbow that connects to the outlet of the turbo while it was off the truck..
The Machine shop reported that the heads would have to be milled to take care of the fire ring damage and to smooth them up. They milled the heads roughly 5 thousandths. The shop did a great job and also ground the valves an equal amount so the compression would be the same, the engine better balanced power wise and clearances would remain adequate. Both heads had issues of this nature and there was one broken stud for the water manifold which they fixed as well. Turnaround time was a little over a day; Fantastic!!!
After final assembly, we installed the pre-turbo EGT and I performed a test drive to see how the truck ran. As we thought the truck is making too much power. It was too easy to run the temps up to the limit we had decided upon and actually I had to lift off the throttle to keep the EGTs down. This is on the pre-turbo EGT. For testing purposes we decided to not go over 1100F pre-turbo on the EGT. After the test drive we tightened a couple of clamps and added about a quart of coolant and I headed home, 100 miles away.
From the outset of planning this repair we planned a testing program with the use of two K-Type thermocouple EGT gauges to see how much of a temperature drop there is in the pre-post turbo locations and this thread will continue as the testing moves forward.
RL