Hello everyone. Although I've just become a member of the site I've been here many times since I bought my car back in 2001. I bought my performance chip from WOT-TECH and I'm very thankful it was made available. It's my first car and I love it, but when it hit 215,000 miles it started to have serious problems. Two top-end rebuilds and one bottom-end rebuild later and I have a new noise. Mechanics either won't touch it or they don't know what it is so they recommend a fresh rebuild at thousands more than I've already spent.
So I've decided to go it alone... plus three friends of mine that love the car and to turn wrenches with me. Plus all of you.
Here's what happened. This past May, I started to hear a bit of a ticking noise. It got worse until it became very loud Memorial Day weekend. I parked it at first, then limped it to the dealership that had been working on it (because no one else would) and they said rod bearings and they wanted to replace the motor. I limped it back home.
Eventually I borrowed a hoist and had my neighbor pull the engine and replace the rod bearings. We thought the sound was coming from cylinder #1, and that rod did have the worst bearing. All of them were bad though. When he got it all back together (he did it from the bottom of the engine and didn't touch the top-end) it made a loud clacking noise at idle. It appeared to be coming from cylinder #1. Different than the rod bearing noise, and we used a scope to determine it was a cam carrier noise, but vibrations are tricky so we could be wrong.
I asked what oil my neighbor used and he said 10W-30 so I got some 5W-30 and we put that in. No noise at idle anymore, but now when you rev it past 2,000 RPM it starts clacking loudly (it only gets faster with more gas, not louder or quieter) and up around 2,500 RPM it will also bog down a little bit and the exhaust smells like gas. I put Seafoam (half a can as recommended) into the crankcase and half into the gas tank and there was no difference.
I took it to a local shop that said they would look at it and it made the 8-mile trip there and back without any change. They wanted to pull it and send it somewhere to rebuild again so I just said no.
I hear no valve plinking off the piston, it still has the same timing it had before, and the rod bearings are new. My friends and I believe it is a dead lifter on the exhaust valves of cylinder #1. The dealership mixed old GM lifters with new aftermarket ones to make a complete set and I think one of the old ones may have gone. No, I didn't have a choice in the matter. They had to send back so many bad lifters that the aftermarket company they were using refused to send any more.
Are you able to tell by my tale of woe what is wrong? If it's not obvious I can get a video posted. Thanks very much.
So I've decided to go it alone... plus three friends of mine that love the car and to turn wrenches with me. Plus all of you.
Here's what happened. This past May, I started to hear a bit of a ticking noise. It got worse until it became very loud Memorial Day weekend. I parked it at first, then limped it to the dealership that had been working on it (because no one else would) and they said rod bearings and they wanted to replace the motor. I limped it back home.
Eventually I borrowed a hoist and had my neighbor pull the engine and replace the rod bearings. We thought the sound was coming from cylinder #1, and that rod did have the worst bearing. All of them were bad though. When he got it all back together (he did it from the bottom of the engine and didn't touch the top-end) it made a loud clacking noise at idle. It appeared to be coming from cylinder #1. Different than the rod bearing noise, and we used a scope to determine it was a cam carrier noise, but vibrations are tricky so we could be wrong.
I asked what oil my neighbor used and he said 10W-30 so I got some 5W-30 and we put that in. No noise at idle anymore, but now when you rev it past 2,000 RPM it starts clacking loudly (it only gets faster with more gas, not louder or quieter) and up around 2,500 RPM it will also bog down a little bit and the exhaust smells like gas. I put Seafoam (half a can as recommended) into the crankcase and half into the gas tank and there was no difference.
I took it to a local shop that said they would look at it and it made the 8-mile trip there and back without any change. They wanted to pull it and send it somewhere to rebuild again so I just said no.
I hear no valve plinking off the piston, it still has the same timing it had before, and the rod bearings are new. My friends and I believe it is a dead lifter on the exhaust valves of cylinder #1. The dealership mixed old GM lifters with new aftermarket ones to make a complete set and I think one of the old ones may have gone. No, I didn't have a choice in the matter. They had to send back so many bad lifters that the aftermarket company they were using refused to send any more.
Are you able to tell by my tale of woe what is wrong? If it's not obvious I can get a video posted. Thanks very much.
Comment