I think i broke rear main bearing

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Are you replacing the rear main with the engine still in the car? Pull it. The job will be cleaner and you'll be able to see what you're doing.
 
Take the cap to a Machine shop and have it filled with spray weld. Then have it drilled, threaded and reface the pump surface. I would bolt and torque it to an old block we have when welding it. Spray weld is the correct way . You won't even see where it was welded. And leave the engine in the car.
 
Take the cap to a Machine shop and have it filled with spray weld. Then have it drilled, threaded and reface the pump surface. I would bolt and torque it to an old block we have when welding it. Spray weld is the correct way . You won't even see where it was welded. And leave the engine in the car.

Probably the BEST fix right here^^^.
 
I've never seen heli coils hold up when used in a stress area. I have a friend who had a block where the machine shop used heli coils in the cylinder head bolt holes, it never held a headgasket after that. The cap is a breeze to install, the problem is having the block align honed

Well then, we will see how I do. I’ve got a BBC on the dyno that has a helicoil in a head stud hole.

I’m betting it won’t fail.

The chances of fitting a main cap and cleaning it up with a line hone is slim. You have to line bore them.
 
Well then, we will see how I do. I’ve got a BBC on the dyno that has a helicoil in a head stud hole.

I’m betting it won’t fail.

The chances of fitting a main cap and cleaning it up with a line hone is slim. You have to line bore them.
It might not fail with a stud, I've seen them fail with the use of bolts. I do wish you the best of luck.
 
Take the cap to a Machine shop and have it filled with spray weld. Then have it drilled, threaded and reface the pump surface. I would bolt and torque it to an old block we have when welding it. Spray weld is the correct way . You won't even see where it was welded. And leave the engine in the car.
If I take the cap off do I still need to hone the block?
 
I'm not gonna lie to you guys I half assed it threaded it and put a longer bolt. It has less than 10k on the motor from what he told me but I'm gonna put a bigger motor down the line regardless but for now I think I should be fine I hope? That's a tomorrow problem lol I know I shouldn't half *** it but it is what it is thanks everyone for your guys help seriously I thought I was done for lol
 
It looks like there is already a heli coil in the other hole. Someone probably used bolts that were too long and cracked it. A thread sert would be more than sufficient to repair that. Yeah, heli-coils are awesome but on something like that I would use a solid thread sert.
 
That's gotta be fixed correctly, with another rear main cap and to have the block align honed so that it fits properly. JB Weld? Nut Sert? No way. That's where the oil pump mounts. Need I say more?
 
I'm not gonna lie to you guys I half assed it threaded it and put a longer bolt. It has less than 10k on the motor from what he told me but I'm gonna put a bigger motor down the line regardless but for now I think I should be fine I hope? That's a tomorrow problem lol I know I shouldn't half *** it but it is what it is thanks everyone for your guys help seriously I thought I was done for lol
You half assed it so far and look at what it got you.
 
It looks like there is already a heli coil in the other hole. Someone probably used bolts that were too long and cracked it. A thread sert would be more than sufficient to repair that. Yeah, heli-coils are awesome but on something like that I would use a solid thread sert.
I cannot agree. There's no way in hades that cracked in two places bolt hole will hold a thread sert or a heli coil. Ain't happenin. At least not for long.
 
I half assed it.................
Just quoting you, buddy. You said it yourself. Anything other than another main cap and align honing it to mate with the block is half assin it. You've already see the results from you half assin it the first time, just like you said in that quote up there ^^^^^^. Do it right and it'll turn out fine.
 
Any welding done on that cap to repair it and you risk heating it until it's out of shape. Think about it. There's really only one correct way to do it. Fix it with bubble gum. My car runs great!
 
It might not fail with a stud, I've seen them fail with the use of bolts. I do wish you the best of luck.

You don’t think that was my first repair like that do you?

I’ve been doing this a LONG time and I’ve never EVER had one fail. So if you or your buddy is failing them, take a look in the mirror.

It’s essentially the same repair for spark plug holes. Zero failures there too.

I don’t need luck.
 
You don’t think that was my first repair like that do you?

I’ve been doing this a LONG time and I’ve never EVER had one fail. So if you or your buddy is failing them, take a look in the mirror.

It’s essentially the same repair for spark plug holes. Zero failures there too.

I don’t need luck.
I think it happened when I tried to torque it. This time I just did it by hand. It looks like it was machined both sides before it was put together.
 
Well then, we will see how I do. I’ve got a BBC on the dyno that has a helicoil in a head stud hole.

I’m betting it won’t fail.

The chances of fitting a main cap and cleaning it up with a line hone is slim. You have to line bore them.
That too. Whatever it takes.
 
You don’t think that was my first repair like that do you?

I’ve been doing this a LONG time and I’ve never EVER had one fail. So if you or your buddy is failing them, take a look in the mirror.

It’s essentially the same repair for spark plug holes. Zero failures there too.

I don’t need luck.
I've never heard of a heli coils hold in a cylinder head bolt hole not to say that they don't work. We wasn't the one's who installed it it was the machine shop, after the heli coil failure the block was junk. Are you using something other than a heli coil ?
 
years ago in Australia
small country garages were issued with a main cap repair set by Chrysler Australia
and a special set of bearings that covered the normal oversizes plus a range with a couple of thou variation that came from the production line that "fixed up" bad tolerances, in problem engines

these caps were all slightly too tall
all had been honed with a precise offset one way or the other

in a situation like this a country garage would
spend some time with the kit and either the bore gauge or plastiguage

find the cap that fitted best
find a combination of upper and lower bearings that fit best which may or may not be a matched set. the one of "best fit" in the cap i think...might have that wrong..!

use a manual (flat plate glass and abrasive paper) method or a machining method to take off a few thou from the mounting face of the cap to get top/bottom clearance

if you could achieve 0.0005 to 0.0015 thou clearance at 3 places across the top surface of the journal put it back together and off you go 500 miles on break in oil. job done using chrysler parts when your nearest main dealer is 100s of miles away.

these kits have not existed since the 70s

you don't have to align bore...... its just a sensible way to do the job if you don't have the special kit...! (or access to the incremental oversize bearings)

i used a front cap from a 318 in my hemi 6 its a big fat thing compared with standard, cap 1 fitted nice in cap 2 position, (cap 2 was sprung, loose in the register) so i could fit the 318 cap in cap 1 position which accommodated its excessive thickness.

i had 4 318 caps to choose from
i chose the "best-fit" one and we got away with a hone i had the time i didn't have the money and i didn't have access to any hemi 6 main caps. there were only 4 of the motors in the country 1 in a museum and 2 in cars + my near scrap rebuilder, which, with much head scratching and swearing, I successfully tuned into a decent motor

needs must....and occasionally you get lucky


Dave
 
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I've never heard of a heli coils hold in a cylinder head bolt hole not to say that they don't work. We wasn't the one's who installed it it was the machine shop, after the heli coil failure the block was junk. Are you using something other than a heli coil ?


Standard helicoil.
 
yes

Unless you have access to stuff to do the job differently which is nigh on impossible today without unobtainable or maybe custom bearings, a pile of main caps and a dogged determination to find the right one

i was just illustrating that there are other ways

cap off a different block, then all caps ground at the mounting face to make them too short.
in bad cases they may do the block faces as well. but that moves the crank up....

Then bolted up and bored to align the lot at a slight undersize
then honed to size within tolerances listed in the manual.
the set up of the boring bar and hone is the expensive bit. the kit costs a lot also
the longer the engine and the bigger the bore the fewer choices of shop you have (only 1 place in the UK that i know of with kit do do a straight 8 for example)

find someone who is getting one done and share the cost

the actual machining job doesn't take long

Dave
 
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