Hi all,
Although I didn't figure out all this till after the fact, I had a piece of crud stick in the needle seat in my carburetor. This caused the carburetor to flood my engine and I had to keep the RPM at about 1,800 minimum to keep the car from dying. I was out of town and drove the car 75 miles to get it home. Now my newly rebuilt engine is smoking. Worst fouling of plugs is on cylinder 4. Some tell me that the extra gas washed the cylinder of oil and ruined the rings.
It seems to smoke the most when it has been sitting at idle and sometimes after going down a grade with the clutch in low gear. So, others tell me that it is the valve seals.
Is there a good way to really tell which is the problem? Is there a way to replace valve seals without pulling the heads? I'd like to try the valve seal approach first, but I don't want to do that and then repeat a lot of work all over again when I find it is the rings and I have to do that.
Thanks,
Bob
Although I didn't figure out all this till after the fact, I had a piece of crud stick in the needle seat in my carburetor. This caused the carburetor to flood my engine and I had to keep the RPM at about 1,800 minimum to keep the car from dying. I was out of town and drove the car 75 miles to get it home. Now my newly rebuilt engine is smoking. Worst fouling of plugs is on cylinder 4. Some tell me that the extra gas washed the cylinder of oil and ruined the rings.
It seems to smoke the most when it has been sitting at idle and sometimes after going down a grade with the clutch in low gear. So, others tell me that it is the valve seals.
Is there a good way to really tell which is the problem? Is there a way to replace valve seals without pulling the heads? I'd like to try the valve seal approach first, but I don't want to do that and then repeat a lot of work all over again when I find it is the rings and I have to do that.
Thanks,
Bob
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