Craig
Active member
Lots and lots of good stuff here. Greg I've been reading all about pumps the last few days and causes of cavitation.
What I need is for somebody to warm it up until the t-stat is opens. Release the pressure under the cap via the little red handle and then remove the radiator cap. Then reach over and give the engine some gas. Does the pump lower the coolant level in the radiator a few inches. The az rebuilder told me on the pickups the pump would push the coolant out the top of the radiator if you gave it gas, the same should be true for scouts, but instead the level would go down, since the cap is on the return side. {mine goes down a few inches now}
lou, no need to weld on the fins. I looked at doing that with my cast one I had, as I do have a tig welder. But swapped it out for a new pump. Then I just rotated the blade a few degrees which raises the blade. I then check the pump with the gasket for running clearance. The problem is "play-dough" does not work at 1/32" I did the best I could and it looked about 1/32" but you need plastic gauge at that point. Or real modeling clay
michael mayben, square body truck,as in 1974 100? You bring up some really good points. 20% less in the Scout to start and then the "normal" other condition that existed on my Scout to start with. I have found that each and every little thing I do helps.
( update, I changed my timing back to 8 degrees last night, had it set to 4 btdc, that was bad
info I got else where.) runs a whole lot better for one thing. (fyi I'm fuel injected too.) looked like it shaved a few degrees off. I have a great big winch which blocks air flow big time. Might remove it, or add air dam to help with air flow. Weather is going to be a lot cooler today, and the first big hill is 15 miles away
What I need is for somebody to warm it up until the t-stat is opens. Release the pressure under the cap via the little red handle and then remove the radiator cap. Then reach over and give the engine some gas. Does the pump lower the coolant level in the radiator a few inches. The az rebuilder told me on the pickups the pump would push the coolant out the top of the radiator if you gave it gas, the same should be true for scouts, but instead the level would go down, since the cap is on the return side. {mine goes down a few inches now}
lou, no need to weld on the fins. I looked at doing that with my cast one I had, as I do have a tig welder. But swapped it out for a new pump. Then I just rotated the blade a few degrees which raises the blade. I then check the pump with the gasket for running clearance. The problem is "play-dough" does not work at 1/32" I did the best I could and it looked about 1/32" but you need plastic gauge at that point. Or real modeling clay
michael mayben, square body truck,as in 1974 100? You bring up some really good points. 20% less in the Scout to start and then the "normal" other condition that existed on my Scout to start with. I have found that each and every little thing I do helps.
( update, I changed my timing back to 8 degrees last night, had it set to 4 btdc, that was bad
info I got else where.) runs a whole lot better for one thing. (fyi I'm fuel injected too.) looked like it shaved a few degrees off. I have a great big winch which blocks air flow big time. Might remove it, or add air dam to help with air flow. Weather is going to be a lot cooler today, and the first big hill is 15 miles away


I can drive to the trail in the morning or at night as the temp would stay lo then too. Today is was only like 85-90 outside.