TT5.9mag
Two atmospheres are better than one
Fixed it for you.Yeowza!!!!
I haven’t seen one like that in ages.
I’m guessing that one wasn’t subjected to a strict 300,000 mile oil change regimen.
Fixed it for you.Yeowza!!!!
I haven’t seen one like that in ages.
I’m guessing that one wasn’t subjected to a strict 300,000 mile oil change regimen.
naw man, you gotta exercise all the demons before you call for the mechanic in a bottle!
Guessing since I bought it back in July. Admittedly, don’t recall if I checked all the plugs or if I hit a handful and thought it looked ok enough. Probably only driven the thing 100-150 miles since then.The BIG question not asked yet: How long has the #7 not been firing and wearing out the cylinder wall and rings from not firing. How long has it run to get that much sluge?
Since you bought it? How long? Miles? Did you know it ran on 7 cylinders?
1) Try a shorter plug for #7
2) Clean out the plugged exhaust crossover in intake and heads.
3) Remove sludge with a putty knife, etc.
Now go drive it and see what you've got.
Beyond that, It's a 273. Dump it.
Compression on all cylinders is 143-155 if that tells anyone anything. 150 on #7.
re 1).... add an extra 2-3 washers/compression rings? to the plug he has to space it out a bit.The BIG question not asked yet: How long has the #7 not been firing and wearing out the cylinder wall and rings from not firing. How long has it run to get that much sluge?
Since you bought it? How long? Miles? Did you know it ran on 7 cylinders?
1) Try a shorter plug for #7
2) Clean out the plugged exhaust crossover in intake and heads.
3) Remove sludge with a putty knife, etc.
Now go drive it and see what you've got.
Beyond that, It's a 273. Dump it.
I've done similar a few times. That's one of them jobs where you just strip down and throw your clothes away when you're finished, and carry a new bottle of Dawn dish soap to the shower with you...lol.I've cleaned an Olds 350 many years ago where the intake valley was slam FULL of that mess. On that particular job, I removed the oil pan. When I got all of it out of the intake valley and heads, I taped off the intake ports with duct tape and used a pressure washer and blasted the intake valley and inside of the heads after I let some purple stuff sit in it till the next day. It came VERY clean. Because of the sludge stopping up some of the pushrods, it burned up several of the aluminum rocker arm hold downs and the valve train was very noisy and the engine ran terribly. I also ended up putting a new oil pump and pickup on it, as well as a new timing chain set. When I got done that was one of the smoothest running Olds engine I've ever seen. It was crying for help.
Yup, you're right on the money!I've done similar a few times. That's one of them jobs where you just strip down and throw your clothes away when you're finished, and carry a new bottle of Dawn dish soap to the shower with you...lol.
If only You knew how many 'teeners were running around that look just like that, "runs like crap when it's cold out, & doesn't want to 'kick down' off fast idle", chances are 50/50 or higher over 85K.......I've punch & chiseled bunches of intakes, then sent them to get 'boiled out' while I worked on the heads, usually timed-out good......when the parts/gaskets & clean intake came back, I had everything opened & cleaned ready for them.That's one blocked off heat crossover alright. Impressive
Lol, that's the 1st thing that popped into My head....Quaker State strikes again!
Better get 3 or 4 cans for that one !
Been there, done that.I always blocked off the crossovers anyway on my cars but I have aftermarket carbs on all my junk except the slants. I saw a guy once pour water down the carb with the engine revved up to break up the carbon from off the piston tops. He would rev it up and pour in water until it almost died then repeat several times. There was a whole lot of black junk coming out of the tailpipe so maybe it worked.
You left out a couple steps. First, trickle a pint or quart of ATF down the carb while it is running. Rev the engine to keep it running when adding ATF or water. Second, drive around the block to loosen up the carbon. Then you trickle 10 to 16 oz (coke bottle) of water down the carb while it is running. We had to do that to a couple /6s that just got putted around town.... I saw a guy once pour water down the carb with the engine revved up to break up the carbon from off the piston tops. He would rev it up and pour in water until it almost died then repeat several times. There was a whole lot of black junk coming out of the tailpipe so maybe it worked.
The sharpest guy I worked for did that to maybe 2 or 3 slant 6s when I worked with him back in the mid 70's.Dan, thanks for jogging my memory on how to do that. I knew there was ATF involved someway, but couldn't remember what, so now I know until I forget it again...lol. The old guy who I saw do that 40 years ago had a saying, "Kill the skeeter's first, then drown the carbon." When I saw him do it, the car smoked like a Tar Kiln while the ATF was being dripped in....lol.