Thread: Water Pump Gasket Sealer
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07-07-2011 10:00 AM #1
Water Pump Gasket Sealer
My back plate to pump gasket (SBF shorty pump) failed some time back and I found that the two thin head bolts that support the long span on the bottom back were loose out of the box, and the gasket had no type of sealer on it, either. Got new gaskets, put it all back together, and now 1100miles later I've got a drip again, looks like from the bottom sealing surface of the pump to the timing cover so the front drive is coming apart again
My question - What type of sealer do you use on water pumps these days? If you use blue RTV do you use the paper gasket, or do you just use RTV alone? I've got a plan, but wondered what others are using, just for grins.Last edited by rspears; 07-07-2011 at 10:02 AM.
Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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07-07-2011 10:57 AM #2
Roger - I try to never use RTV/silicone on anything engine wise but the ends of the intake manifold to valley. What I've had the best luck with on water connections is ordinary (flammable) DAP contact cement. Of course, the Edelbrock Gasgacinch (sp?) will work as well as it is contact cement with a higher price tag I also only use Fel-Pro gaskets.Dave W
I am now gone from this forum for now - finally have pulled the plug
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07-07-2011 12:00 PM #3
Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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07-07-2011 12:08 PM #4
Roger, you may remember that I posted a while back that I am on my 3rd short Ford Racing water pump due to exactly what you have going on. The first one started dripping water out of that spot after a few miles........airfreighted a new one in and I got as far as Daytona before the second one blew out that same gasket at the bottom. I bought some gasket paper and glued the heck out of the new gasket I made, and while I was at it I found the same two bolts loose on my pump.
That pump lasted the weekend and blew again on the way home on Sunday, so I trailered the car home and let it sit until I felt like looking at it again. When I tore it down I found the diffuser plate inside had come loose from the vanes and chewed up everything inside. I called Ford Racing and the guy there told me "We leave those bolts loose on purpose so you can apply sealant to the gasket and then tighten them down." I've been installing water pumps for 50 years and never had to tighten those up, even on reman pumps.
Anyway, I finally figured out that the Zoops pulleys I was running were overdriving the water pump by maybe 50% or more, so it was blowing the pumps apart. I found a company named Runne Rite and they make the correct pulleys which I installed. After all that I now have hundreds of miles on the car and it runs cooler and no more water pump issues. I mention this because you may have a similar issue going on.
As for sealant on that gasket, I used Permatex Gray and it seems to be fine.
Don
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07-07-2011 12:59 PM #5
I learned a long time ago to check those back plate bolts on all water pumps,can't tell you how many times I have found them loose on brand new out of the box pumps. Far as sealers, Peramatex Ultra copper is the only silicone I'll use and only on exhaust applications. I use Permatex RIGHT STUFF on everything else. Stuffs a little pricey but worth it. I use it for gasket sealer,but works very well when you don't have a gasket. Only drawback is it makes things hard to get apart.
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07-07-2011 01:24 PM #6
Yep, the Right Stuff is really good stuff and also hard to remove. We had sealed up the intake manifold ends with it on my Sons 455 Olds and a week later when we removed the intake I thought the stuff was never going to break free. I actually worried about cracking the intake manifold as I was prying it up.
Don
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07-07-2011 01:55 PM #7
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07-07-2011 02:10 PM #8
Concur with all the above - no silicone here and I really like the Permatex Right Stuff - it's got some type of rubber-like compound in it that seems to be pliable, fills little microscopic imperfections, and impervious to the heat generated in the water pump application. I use a little bead on all sides and assemble right away as this - stuff starts to set right away.
(I used a lot of Gasgacinch when building dirt bikes (two-strokes) and it seemed to work well for cases and water passages - also really easy to take apart. But you're not wanting to take your pump apart on a regular basis!!)"Where the people fear the government you have tyranny. Where the government fears the people you have liberty." John Basil Barnhil
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07-07-2011 02:22 PM #9
I talked to Brad at Rocky Hinge, and he also said that those back bolts are left loose, but his reason was to allow alignment of the back plate with the bolt holes!! I've learned my lesson on those two bolts, and they will not be ignored again. On the Right Stuff, my concern is that they say that all bolts are to be at final torque within five minutes, and that's going to be a challenge with this front drive unit, getting all of the pieces, parts and spacers in the right places, and then getting everything tight in order. It's all apart now, but I had to pull the radiator to get access - simply too tight to get everything out!Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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07-07-2011 06:21 PM #10
What pulleys are you running, Roger? What are the sizes of the crank and wp pulleys?
Don
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07-07-2011 07:52 PM #11
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07-07-2011 09:26 PM #12
There is your problem, Roger, you are overdriving that pump by having a smaller pulley on it. That was my problem too. The correct pulleys were discontinued by Ford Racing but Runne Rite used to make them for Ford and still carries them. Once I ordered the right ones it was VERY apparent I was killing the pumps myself by having the wrong pulleys on them.
In the picture below the pulleys on the left are the wrong Zoops pulleys I had on it. The ones on the right are the correct Runne Rite pulleys, You can see how overdriven it was, and yours is similar. You will never keep any gasket in that pump with that overdriven condition..............I had to learn the hard way, about $ 1500 dollars worth of screw ups later, if you factor in 3 pumps, two sets of pulleys, U Haul truck and trailer to bring my car back from Daytona, etc. But it is finally working great after I got the right pulleys.
Also, I don't know if you can see on Don's car (blue one) but the stock Ford wp pulley is huge compared to the crank pulley, slowing it down even more.
Don
BTW, here is Runne Rites website: (Oh, and all of those pulleys shown are billet aluminum, they just photographed black for some reason.....reflection?)
http://runne-rite.com/pulleykits.htmlLast edited by Itoldyouso; 07-07-2011 at 09:36 PM.
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07-08-2011 05:49 AM #13
Don,
I'll definitely keep that in mind and will keep that RunneRite link in my back pocket, but in my case I think I found the culprit in a bolt not being torqued to spec at a critical point, leaking around one of the pump ports on the plate to block surface. With the Street Drive unit three critical points at the water ports are threaded billet spacers that must first be tightened on the pump, then the outer bracket tightened to that spacer. One of mine was not tight at the pump.
I've finally seen that on this pump all around the back plate to pump is a critical seal; but on the pump back plate to block the critical point is only around the two water ports into the block. There's a weep hole relief at the bottom of the raised sealing surface on the front cover, and any coolant that gets out from the pump inlet/outlet seal area drips from that weep relief. The pump to block seal could just as easily (and maybe more effectively) be a pair of O-rings at the ports, with nothing around the rest of the pump, but it is critical that the entire surface be equally tightened to seal the plate to pump surface.
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You can see here that mine shows evidence of port leakage from both stains on the pump and the front cover, but the weep hole at the bottom was totally blocked with RTV so it held for a while. Also interesting to me is that if you look at the front cover there are three holes around each of the ports (inner ones still have blue RTV in them), but on this pump only the two outside perimeter holes are used on each side, leaving the inner load around both ports to be picked up by other perimeter bolts. It would be a much better pump design to have two more bolts at the ports, but we live with what the OEM designer gave us....
Like I said, a pair of RunneRite pulleys may still be in my future, but I think I'll pull the back cover, inspect the impeller, and if OK install the back cover being sure it is sealed 100%, then reinstall the pump and the rest of the junk. Can't check for leaks until the radiator is re-mounted and buttoned upLast edited by rspears; 07-08-2011 at 06:27 AM.
Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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07-08-2011 10:37 AM #14
Roger, the only places you should have to put any sealant is around the 2 water ports, as marked in red, and also on the four bolts that go into the water passages, 2 of them also in red. Sealant around the entire perimeter does nothing but make the pump hard to replace.
Don
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07-08-2011 11:01 AM #15
Don,
I agree, but as shown on the back side of the pump there's no bolt in that hole you circled on the left side when looking at the timing cover - it's just a flat spot on the pump backing plate. The one on the lower right indeed needs RTV on the bolt threads. I think that a better pump design would have had two added bolts, one in the hole you circled, and one on the other side, immediately above the hole you circled, at the inner corners of the ports but there's no holes on the pump in those two spots. The sealing pressure has to come from the next bolts up, adjacent to the top center bolt on each side.Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
Welcome to CHR. I think that you need to hook up your vacuum advance. At part throttle when cruising you have less air and fuel in each cylinder, and the air-fuel mixture is not as densely packed...
MSD 8360 distributor vacuum advance