Ramblin Man
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- Joined
- Jun 13, 2005
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This is a little off topic but relevant so I figured I'd relate a horror story as a warning to others.
I have several old BMWs in various stages of completion. One has been patiently waiting for me to get around to it for a few years now. I was going to put a dual weber side draft conversion on it among other things. A couple years ago I pulled the intake and made a nice cover with a gasket to go over the intake ports to keep everything dry. The motor was one of the quietest and smooth motors I'd heard with only 100k. Thats nothing for a 78 2.0 m10. The car has been in my garage or driveway with a cover.
Three days ago I went to start the conversion and the first thing I do after anything has sat that long is to put oil in the cylinders and crank it by hand. No luck. It was locked up tight. I pulled the head and there was rust in the number 4 cylinder. The problem was that the engine had come to a stop with the number 4 exhaust valve in the open position. Condensation had found its way up the pipe and into the cylinder. I was able to clean up the bore and the head, but the rust had made it to and possibly past the rings, right now I don't know, I have to pull the crank to get the piston out.
This was a really great motor in super shape before I neglected it. It looked like it only had a couple thousand miles on it when I got the head off.
I thought I had taken precautions to keep what happened from happening.
If any of you guys have more toys than time, you may want to give those cylinders some attention now and then just to let them know you care. A plastic bag, rubberband, and four squirts of WD40 through the spark plug hole once a year would have saved me.
I have several old BMWs in various stages of completion. One has been patiently waiting for me to get around to it for a few years now. I was going to put a dual weber side draft conversion on it among other things. A couple years ago I pulled the intake and made a nice cover with a gasket to go over the intake ports to keep everything dry. The motor was one of the quietest and smooth motors I'd heard with only 100k. Thats nothing for a 78 2.0 m10. The car has been in my garage or driveway with a cover.
Three days ago I went to start the conversion and the first thing I do after anything has sat that long is to put oil in the cylinders and crank it by hand. No luck. It was locked up tight. I pulled the head and there was rust in the number 4 cylinder. The problem was that the engine had come to a stop with the number 4 exhaust valve in the open position. Condensation had found its way up the pipe and into the cylinder. I was able to clean up the bore and the head, but the rust had made it to and possibly past the rings, right now I don't know, I have to pull the crank to get the piston out.
This was a really great motor in super shape before I neglected it. It looked like it only had a couple thousand miles on it when I got the head off.
I thought I had taken precautions to keep what happened from happening.
If any of you guys have more toys than time, you may want to give those cylinders some attention now and then just to let them know you care. A plastic bag, rubberband, and four squirts of WD40 through the spark plug hole once a year would have saved me.