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Engine Drop - Stealth Mode -- All done !!
Just started to drop my engine in order to install a new clutch on my 73 and some „while-you-are-in“ projects along the way. The tricky part is that in my garage I’m only allowed to perform „minor cleaning and maintenance“. Being a German engineer, my interpretation of this rule is that a quick engine drop can well be considered „minor maintenance“. With the legal details settled, it will still be beneficial to keep the whole operation as stealth as possible. Ideally my neighbor - with whom I share the garage - should not even realize what is going on.
The first afternoon was quite uneventful with all fluids drained, oil lines, fuel lines and cables disconnected and carburetors and fan housing removed. I want to clean the carbs anyway, so I figured its easier to remove them now, which should make it easier to remove the engine later. I will post some pictures showing the progress once in a while. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1134707385.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1134707436.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1134707466.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1134707493.jpg Luckily my car cover is quite big and I hope to keep everything „under cover“. |
Awesome. I love it. Total control and neatness. By time most of us get the motor out, there are tools and skid marks everywhere. By"skid marks," I mean smudges of oil on the floor etc.
One thing I was impressed with was Mobileworks' cleanliness on a recent thread. I'm not sure who provided the cardboard under the engine bay, but it was a class act. Your project looks well sorted and very clean to start with. I'm envious. |
Reminds me of the dual engine swap I performed in my (then) girlfriends open air parking lot at a townhouse complex. We used a cherry picker to pull an engine from a doner Rabbit, plucked a tired engine out of a Scirocco and replaced with the doner. All in one day :)
Got a lot of wide eyed looks from the residents, but we got away with it! Stealth was not an option, so I hope that works for you. Speed is your friend, good luck! |
Nice work on the covert ops Guenter!! You have a beautiful color, is it continental orange? Good luck with the mission. ;)
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Very nice, a time back Brother and I and Pete did a drop on his, the comment that stuck, it looks like a CSI murder scene, parts,fluids and prints everywhere.Learned alot and had a blast. Yours looks like a OR.
Rika |
Hi,
Did you drop the engine + trans of just the engine?? Very clean work! |
When I was in college, there was a similar rule at the apartments I lived in with a roomate. I took my motorcycle engine into my bedroom for a top end job....After that I painted the gas tank and side covers in the same bedroom....Although I used cardboard, they was a little oversrpay of blue on the green carpet.....When we moved out the next summer, the manager said we did a great job of cleaning...He said: "you didn't have to do all this, we just want to make sure you didn't overhaul an engine in the living room".....I said: Nope, did that in the bedroom...
More power to you Guenter - I agree with Zeke, a very clean operation... |
Re: Engine Drop - Stealth Mode
Quote:
You've got to work with the cover off and it will be obvious that a major piece of work is going on no matter how neat you are (and you are AWFULLY neat by the way!) |
Wow, I usually have every tool from my box all over the floor just to replace a headlight or something. I should have considered your method before I decided to take the doors, fenders and lids off of my SC. No neighbors to worry about, but the Wife is not very happy. Man! A torn down 911 sure takes up alot room. Good luck and keep us posted on your progress.
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grease the neighbor with booze. you are so neat, i am sure nobody would complain anyways.
i did the same as bob. a friend and i tore a CB650 apart in the underground parking structure of USF. we did get caught, but they let us slide. we were obviously past the point of no return. there were skid marks everywhere. even some from the motorcycle! |
wow, covert ops!
nice 73? looks like factory paint with all the engine room decals still in place! are you still using the charcoal canister in the front? if so, where is it tied into a vacuum source? thanks Bill K |
isn't that back sitting a little high?
Any astute apartment manager should notice the ride height is not to specification!
good luck with your project, looks great! Jeff:D |
Thanks for the mental support guys. I try to answer some of your questions from above as follows:
Charcoal canister: Charcoal canister and forward plumbing is already removed. This time I will take the chance to remove all the connection hoses from the engine to the trunk area. (Not that there is something wrong with emission control equipment ...) Neighbor: Luckily he is a very consistent 9 to 5 guy - fits my schedule well, as I don't intend to do everything at once and take small steps at a time (2-3 hours a day max.). Color: Continental orange with the original Tangerine inside the engine bay. Drop: I will drop both engine and gearbox. The gearbox mainly because the previous owner installed the bolts for the banana arms the wrong way, and I can't get them out with the gearbox in place. Will also make it easier to replace all the rubber gas lines, and then of course I have some new mounts, a new shift linkage seal, etc... |
Hilarious.
I agree that on an air-cooled engine, it is minor. If he gives you any guff remind him that Charles Manson used to swap VW air cooled engines in the middle of the desert. They carried in the engines by hand I think. Then tell you him you are very very interested in Manson and have a complete museum on his exploits... but your eyes out at him and act very hyper and excited as you keep telling him more an more about your hero... He'll leave you alone |
Great job... After it is completed, I would move!!!!
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I love California,
Weather was so nice today, that garage work was off. Opted instead to clean my carbs in bright sunshine on the balcony (cosy 70 F – that’s 20 C for my dear friends in Germany, who have to preheat their tools by know to avoid frost bite). Found the main jets pretty clogged up as usual and two blocked accelerator pump jets, which hopefully explains the hesitation I had noticed lately. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1134785891.jpg |
After I rebuilt my VW bus engine on the living room carpet, I moved... but I was young and stoopid.
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I was already getting worried. Everything went just too easy and even the drive shaft bolts came off without drama. But finally the car starts to show some resistance. The speedometer cable nut won't move and it looks like it is very easy to round off. So I soaked it in penetrating oil for the weekend and hope it will fall off by Monday. If not I might have to try a small needle flame, but this is quite tricky because of the location and the decades of oil and fuel deposits in this area (any advice how else to loosen this nut would be appreciated). Otherwise good progress - driveshafts, starter cables, heater hoses, clutch cable, shift coupler and backup switch disconnected. We are getting closer to drop date. The car is jacked up to stage one (small jack). For stage two (engine drop height) I will borrow a larger jack for next week. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1134867767.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1134867802.jpg Car cover is doing a good job. Even jacked up the car is still lower than my neighbor's Passat. Someone walking into the garage will hardly notice anything from the normal viewing angle. I might just have to camouflage the red jacks. |
be very careful with the speedo nut. it is possible to have the nut full in the wrench then start to loosen it, then hit the frame an snap the whole assy away from the case. broken snub is possible to re-attach and seal with an o ring inside the speedo housing, but not recommended.
ask me how I know... take baby steps and keep turning the wrench over each 1/8 turn. good luck Bill K |
The engine has landed !!!. The penetrating oil Spa-package for the speedometer nut worked wonder during the weekend and today it came loose without a hitch. Wasted no time and dropped engine and gearbox. The furniture dolley ($ 19.95) works great and allows to move the engine while working inside the engine bay. Good I already ordered new crankshaft seals as the rear seal is leaking heavily. Next steps will be a big clean up for engine, gearbox and engine bay.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1135040874.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1135040900.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1135040925.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1135040947.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1135040969.jpg |
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