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Registered
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Santiago - CHILE
Posts: 78
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Engine drop question
I'm about to drop my engine for a rebuild.
I'm planning on dropping the engine along with the transmission. My question is: where is the center of gravity for the engine+tranny assembly? I want to make sure I place the jack in the correct spot. The car is a 1985 Turbo-Look.
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Max Hofer 1985 911 Turbo-Look 1985 944 NA Santiago - CHILE |
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87 - 911
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 200
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Working from memory, based on dropping my 3.2 with G50 the CG falls be on the engine side of the flywheel.
I used my main floor jack under the engine and a smaller floor jack under the trans crossmember to position the transmission. The concern with using the center of gravity to balance the engine transmission on a single point is it will be unstable. Any bump or push will knock it off balance and it dump it. Used a piece of plywood between the jack and the engine, in the center of the plywood I screwed on two small strips of wood spaced about 1/2 inch apart. I positioned the center seam of the crankcase in the small gap between the wood strips. Best of luck with the drop, last fall was my first time. She is now back together and running stronger than ever. |
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Registered
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Loxahatchee, florida
Posts: 2,894
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i got that floor jack adapter they sell here it fits the Cg perfectly and is ajustable to get the angle right as it slides into the car.
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88 turbo Guards red Targa slant nose, and yes I am a horsepower junkie, 3.4liter,7.5 to 1 JE pistons, Adjustable WUR, Imagine fuel head, 1 bar waste gate headers,allthe cis toys. Now apart to become the next EFI monster. fabbing my own intake, headers Individual throttle bodies, MS-3, pauter rods, Xtreme twin plugged heads, gt-2 evo cams cop's. 2019 Silverado 6.2L |
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Certified User
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I made up this adapter from plywood many years ago and it has done many engine drops on Carreras and 930s (same crankcase shape).
I screw it to the jack pad and it fits snuggly under the engine just ahead of the the balance point. Looking at the second pic, the CoG is maybe 1/2" behind the centre of the jack pad for a 3.2 and 1" for a turbo (based on standard exhaust weights). ![]() ![]()
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Bill 1988 Carrera - 3.6 engine with ITBs, COPs, MS3X 2024 Macan S Day job ... www.jesfab.com.au Memories: '68 912, '72 911T, '80 911SC, '84 911, '85 930, '86 930, '87 911, '21 Macan S |
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Registered
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Santiago - CHILE
Posts: 78
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Shrtshck and Ken, thanks for your answers.
Bill: your adapter looks very nice and easy to build. I'll try to make my own. Max.
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Max Hofer 1985 911 Turbo-Look 1985 944 NA Santiago - CHILE |
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Registered
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: NYC berbs
Posts: 345
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One thing you have to remember to do is tip the engine down and the trany up so you can slip the transmission shift shaft out of the car body. You do not want to get that shaft hung up in the car body with the weight of the engine and trany on the other end.
I used a Motorcycle lift with a wooden saddle to cradle the engine and a smaller jack under the transmission. |
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87 - 911
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 200
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The motorcycle lift works well, I had picked up one on sale years ago, never trusted it to pick up the bike but is does a great job for Porsche engine removal. The broad surface area ensures the engine and transmission are stable, a floor jack under the transmission allows you to position the transmission as needed. Did the drop and reinstall (first time) single handed.
It does-not have enough lift to bring the engine up to the mounts in a single lift. What I did was lifted the engine to max height, started the trans mount bolts to stabilize the unit, braced under the engine, then dropped the lift and added some spacers under the lifting board. ![]() |
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