Depending on how the gasket broke and where, how about resealing the pan
with a silicon gasket maker? I have done this and had a repair that
worked for years. It was on a B engine. I just cleaned the
surfaces as oil free as possible and squeezed a thin layer of the sealant
onto both surfaces, laid the broken pieces of pan gasket into place and
snugged it up. After about 15 minutes I went ahead and torqued it home.
It may not be a concourse type repair, but it worked and saved an
enormous amount of labor.
Bill Huff
At 5/21/2005 03:22 PM, Matt Proske wrote:
Hey everyone,
Small problem. I'm working on my 1956 plymouth plaza - 277 3 spd.
Found a coolant leak between the timing cover and block. To remove the
front cover, needed to loosten the oil pan. Broke the pan gasket and I
don't see any way of getting the pan out w/o lifting the engine. GREAT!
(please let me know if there is another way - without cutting my front
cross member) To disconnect the bell hsg from the block, all of the bolts
can be reached "easily" enough, except one. I removed the dust
cover from the trans and found one dirty little bolt on the lower pass
side, up inside of the bell hsg. I can just reach it with a long wrench
and I did get it loose. But, before I get it all of the way out, is this
bolt actually a guide pin? I'm not sure that even if I can get it out all
the way that I'll be able to get it back in again. It doesn't look like
there's enough room to completely remove it (in between the flywheel and
the interior wall of the bell hsg).
So, do I have to lift the engine to remove the pan, and, is this a bolt
or a guide pin?
Anyone else out there who's done this before, any advice would be
appreciated.
Thanks everyone,
Matt
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