10 bolt holes, no waiting
Quote:
Originally Posted by CHEVYBOY
How many bolt hold on your timing cover? Gen VI block have a composite cover with six bolts as opposed to 10 on the Gen IV
My baby has 10 bolts holding down the timing cover. So I guess I'm a proud papa of a Gen IV..meaning I won't have to put one of them newfangled oil pans on it to fit it into my Elky's engine bay. Whew!
Kurt
Wired vs. unwired for the dino juice
Quote:
Originally Posted by kitz
I would only go electric personally.
When this beast eventually does get plopped down into it's final home between my Elky's frame horns, I may end up going electric on both the water and fuel pump...depending on my checking account balance at the time.
But since all this fuss started as a "I-just-got-the-motor-and-want-to-fire-it-up-for-giggles-on-my-engine-test-run-stand" exercise, I'm feeling the pain of the cost of buying a zapped fuel pumper and busy work of hooking up yet another set of wires to my engine test run stand.
Verses...
picking up a $25 O'Reilly fuel pump and pushrod, lubing them up and running some rubber hose to feed the beast some dino juice.
That is..if my cam actually has a lobe to crank the mech fuel pump up and down...still need to determine that.
In the meantime, I may just hunt around for an electric pump to mount on my engine test run stand. Who knows what some intensive pricelining and ebaying may reveal.
To lobe or not to lobe, that is the question
Quote:
Originally Posted by DennyW
Did you check the cam for the fuel pump lobe yet ?
Other than sticking a wooden spoon handle into the pushrod hole and giving the crank a few turns to see if the spoon bobs up and down, I'm out of ideas on how to check for the existence of the appropriate lobe from the outside.
Anyone have one of those colonoscopy cameras mounted on the end of a long, flexible probe, complete with micro led light? Would come in handy about now.
But please clean it off before sending it please. I'd like to keep the innerds of my big block sorta sanitary...thanks.
Kurt