jauringer
Member
Well it started out as a bad day and has progressively gotten to the point where I want sell the Scout, melt my tools down and have them made into a set of golfclubs. At least I half way know what I'm doing on a golf course.
Keep in mind this was an incidental discovery. No bent pushrods, misses, etc. I did have two lifters make noise on me about a week ago (roughly) which is posted here. I pulled them, cleaned them out and went on my way. The only reason I even saw what I saw was because I had what looked to be a leaky rms (which I was bummed about anyway). When I got behind the engine I saw a potential leak point on the bottom of the rear cam plate as it looked like it was collecting oil before being blown around by the flexplate. Anyway, removing the rear cam plate is when it all went to hell in a hand basket. With all this damage, I just don't understand how I had the op I did? See pics below, I'm not sure it could get much worse.
Engine details: has 500 miles. 304 60 over- contoured piston engine, 8.9cr, isky split duration cam. .010/.010 crank. Roller tip rocker arms, 110-295 valve springs iirc.
History: engine break in went relatively well. I did have to shut it down at the 15min Mark when my pickup coil connection started coming loose. I stopped it immediately and then ran it for another 20 minutes afterwards. Never got below ~2000/2500 rpm. About a week ago or so. (post is here) I had two lifters start banging at start up. They took a while to pump up and bled down quickly. I pulled 4 lifters as I wasn't sure exactly which ones they were, cleaned and reinstalled. They stopped making noise. (I think I've got a pretty good idea of what clogged the up in the first place now) since then I've been driving it everyday. Hot idle is @ 24 psi and cruise is ~50-55. It's never once dropped below this.
Little bits of cam bearing behind the rear cam plate. I began tear down immediately and this was just the beginning.
The worst of it all. #3 cam bearing looks like it has actually spun
.
Had to force the cam out and after I did the #3 cam bearing just fell down in the pan.
Used to be an oil hole there.
#3 bearing surface
#2 and #4 cam bearings. Majority of the damage seems to start at the 6 o'clock position. The #1 cam bearing is the only one that seemed to survive.
Cam journals:
#5: the #5 cam bearing has the exact mold of this journal in the 6 o'clock position.
#3
#2
#1 (guess I didn't shoot #4.)
The rod and main bearings look relatively well considering what they've had to endure. Thee is some embedment. Especially on the #3 main(thrust) where the cam bearing hole was blocked.
Here are a few remaining shots.
I'm at the point where I have no idea where to go from here. I know I need to take a bore gauge to the #3 cam bore and see what kind of damage I'm looking at. Most importantly I need to figure what happened, why it happened, and how not to do it again!
Any help would be greatly appreciated. The entire block is torn back down so if there are anymore pics needed, I can handle it.
Jason
Keep in mind this was an incidental discovery. No bent pushrods, misses, etc. I did have two lifters make noise on me about a week ago (roughly) which is posted here. I pulled them, cleaned them out and went on my way. The only reason I even saw what I saw was because I had what looked to be a leaky rms (which I was bummed about anyway). When I got behind the engine I saw a potential leak point on the bottom of the rear cam plate as it looked like it was collecting oil before being blown around by the flexplate. Anyway, removing the rear cam plate is when it all went to hell in a hand basket. With all this damage, I just don't understand how I had the op I did? See pics below, I'm not sure it could get much worse.
Engine details: has 500 miles. 304 60 over- contoured piston engine, 8.9cr, isky split duration cam. .010/.010 crank. Roller tip rocker arms, 110-295 valve springs iirc.
History: engine break in went relatively well. I did have to shut it down at the 15min Mark when my pickup coil connection started coming loose. I stopped it immediately and then ran it for another 20 minutes afterwards. Never got below ~2000/2500 rpm. About a week ago or so. (post is here) I had two lifters start banging at start up. They took a while to pump up and bled down quickly. I pulled 4 lifters as I wasn't sure exactly which ones they were, cleaned and reinstalled. They stopped making noise. (I think I've got a pretty good idea of what clogged the up in the first place now) since then I've been driving it everyday. Hot idle is @ 24 psi and cruise is ~50-55. It's never once dropped below this.
Little bits of cam bearing behind the rear cam plate. I began tear down immediately and this was just the beginning.

The worst of it all. #3 cam bearing looks like it has actually spun


Had to force the cam out and after I did the #3 cam bearing just fell down in the pan.

Used to be an oil hole there.

#3 bearing surface

#2 and #4 cam bearings. Majority of the damage seems to start at the 6 o'clock position. The #1 cam bearing is the only one that seemed to survive.


Cam journals:
#5: the #5 cam bearing has the exact mold of this journal in the 6 o'clock position.

#3

#2

#1 (guess I didn't shoot #4.)


The rod and main bearings look relatively well considering what they've had to endure. Thee is some embedment. Especially on the #3 main(thrust) where the cam bearing hole was blocked.
Here are a few remaining shots.


I'm at the point where I have no idea where to go from here. I know I need to take a bore gauge to the #3 cam bore and see what kind of damage I'm looking at. Most importantly I need to figure what happened, why it happened, and how not to do it again!
Any help would be greatly appreciated. The entire block is torn back down so if there are anymore pics needed, I can handle it.
Jason
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