Good catch. Looks like the other side is lined up.
Good catch. Looks like the other side is lined up.
Pictures are apparently all taken in Joe's,.......... "clean room"!Joe, is your operation taking place in a sand blasting area, desert, or what? I always see the sand in the background.
"I do not think I would assemble an engine in that environment"Hello Joe,
whatever you do, when you have the head on the engine do not turn it with the starter. Turn it by hand slowly. A valve is bent faster than you can "upps".
And read and follow all the good advice from others here in the thread.
And yes, all that sand has in your pictures has me worried as well. I do not think I would assemble an engine in that environment.
Kind regards,
Hagen
Yes I am with you, this picture seems that way
Do you know how many times I went to take picture, and couldn't because the lens is covered in grease?One thing for sure, Joe's play by play documentary and photography are spot on.
I was very nervous about the gears matching, they definitely did match, I wish I would have taken an up close video, that picture is somewhat at an angle, making that gear appear offGood catch. Looks like the other side is lined up.
There are such low hours on them, and I am tapped out of spending at the moment, but maybeDo yourself a favor and get a cylinder hone for use on a drill. At least get some kind of cross hatch in those cylinders before installing pistons.
All of your comments are my favorite, you and jax, are major assets to this thread/project, I cant tell you how valuable you have been for getting my questions answered (or maybe you do know how valuable)Pictures are apparently all taken in Joe's,.......... "clean room"!
I fully agree with you that this environment is not ideal. But we are testing a theory,And yes, all that sand has in your pictures has me worried as well. I do not think I would assemble an engine in that environment.
Sure looks pretty, just the way it is!Yes I am with you, this picture seems that way
When I was rotating them, they were perfect, all of them
Do you know how many times I went to take picture, and couldn't because the lens is covered in grease?
I have to put legitimate effort into: cleaning the lens before each picture
If you do this the way I am showing, then all pictures and narratives can be retraced for the rebuild, you'll know what is the next step knowing the step that you took for disassembly
I was not interested in doing any of this, but when I post clear shiny pictures of all the steel, and people comment, THEY make it interesting to me
Tons of solutions came from:
"I am annoyed by this, let me post pictures of it" (sometimes without even the original intention to fix it)
and somehow solutions are eventually discovered, kind people saying true statements that lead to it
Something about saying what I did is a reflection of progress so I do not lose hope, and saying that I will do X or Y forces me to "keep my word"
I always say what happened, then I say the "next goal"
I was very nervous about the gears matching, they definitely did match, I wish I would have taken an up close video, that picture is somewhat at an angle, making that gear appear off
There are such low hours on them, and I am tapped out of spending at the moment, but maybe
All of your comments are my favorite, you and jax, are major assets to this thread/project, I cant tell you how valuable you have been for getting my questions answered (or maybe you do know how valuable)
I fully agree with you that this environment is not ideal. But we are testing a theory,
The theory: "Can we rebuild an engine using nothing fancy, right there on the dirt floor, under the trees in the shade?"
Answer: maybe, only thing left is pistons and head
One detail bugging me: the paint is not matching the original kubota paint, do yall think I can get that paint in bulk for low cost and just hit with EXACT matching paint
I want to make it look factory for all the "dinosaurs" to have flashback of when they saw them NEW
Dont worry: 100% I will be doing the EXACT orange that Kubota used on that machine
When you see it, I want to to bring back memories that are 40 years old
I'll look into getting that blue/green that they use for the engine/frame, see if it is affordable
View attachment 137639 View attachment 137640 View attachment 137641
Took off tape, non polar solvent, on a rag, wipe excess paint
That's the grey. He's looking for blue.There are many threads on here about the paint with some offering alternatives that are close, cheaper and probably better paint.
But (on earth) you can get the paint from the Kubota dealer in larger quantities and in spray cans. But it is probably more expensive than the normal paint at hardware stores.
I believe this is the part number needed in the gallon can
70000-73358
View attachment 137660
Those bushings have to be sized, reamed , to fit the wrist pinsYes I am with you, this picture seems that way
When I was rotating them, they were perfect, all of them
Do you know how many times I went to take picture, and couldn't because the lens is covered in grease?
I have to put legitimate effort into: cleaning the lens before each picture
If you do this the way I am showing, then all pictures and narratives can be retraced for the rebuild, you'll know what is the next step knowing the step that you took for disassembly
I was not interested in doing any of this, but when I post clear shiny pictures of all the steel, and people comment, THEY make it interesting to me
Tons of solutions came from:
"I am annoyed by this, let me post pictures of it" (sometimes without even the original intention to fix it)
and somehow solutions are eventually discovered, kind people saying true statements that lead to it
Something about saying what I did is a reflection of progress so I do not lose hope, and saying that I will do X or Y forces me to "keep my word"
I always say what happened, then I say the "next goal"
I was very nervous about the gears matching, they definitely did match, I wish I would have taken an up close video, that picture is somewhat at an angle, making that gear appear off
There are such low hours on them, and I am tapped out of spending at the moment, but maybe
All of your comments are my favorite, you and jax, are major assets to this thread/project, I cant tell you how valuable you have been for getting my questions answered (or maybe you do know how valuable)
I fully agree with you that this environment is not ideal. But we are testing a theory,
The theory: "Can we rebuild an engine using nothing fancy, right there on the dirt floor, under the trees in the shade?"
Answer: maybe, only thing left is pistons and head
One detail bugging me: the paint is not matching the original kubota paint, do yall think I can get that paint in bulk for low cost and just hit with EXACT matching paint
I want to make it look factory for all the "dinosaurs" to have flashback of when they saw them NEW
Dont worry: 100% I will be doing the EXACT orange that Kubota used on that machine
When you see it, I want to to bring back memories that are 40 years old
I'll look into getting that blue/green that they use for the engine/frame, see if it is affordable
View attachment 137639 View attachment 137640 View attachment 137641
Took off tape, non polar solvent, on a rag, wipe excess paint
View attachment 137642
Use brush apply grease on surface, it hold gasket on, put on oil filter
View attachment 137643
Cannot proceed further without installing big governor spring,
Look at diagram with microscope, install big governor spring
View attachment 137644
Spring 150: Study their line, start at the swivel in lower left, then catches back of left arm, hook up into the swivel, and hook right into left "arm"...
ok i go try now
September 14, 2024
youtube.com
Put spring on, tested, gave it full throttle, both springs holding
View attachment 137657
Recycled the shim, scrub with diesel, put injection pump in place
View attachment 137658
Moved crankshaft with clamp, put body weight on injection pump, it sprung down, fasten hardware
There is not much else to do at this point but get the pistons ready and installed from other engine
Now: do a full cleanup of shop mostly clearing all walkways, put back all tools, get all the pistons on the table and decide what hardware they need, if any
The only possible holdup to putting pistons inside and closing up engine to do the first startup, I narrate:
I do have genuine piston bushings I want to install (some had gashes), I did damage to one chiseling into it, I do not have press
If we can DIY this without press, it would make zero holdup and we can do the engine test
My idea: sharpen chisel, cut into the bushing damage it off the connecting rod, hit connecting rod HARD with torch, put bushing flat on connecting rod, put on vice, crush into it FLATLY, finangle some DIY setup where we can move the show on the road...
someone come up with something or critique my idea
And yes on the paint, i figure it out
View attachment 137674
Got all pistons and hardware from both engines on table, hit table with compressed air, raked shop floor, put all tools back
View attachment 137675
The only parts left to put on
Sorry about that @joesmith123That's the grey. He's looking for blue.
Not to worry:... Joe is figuring it out!Sanding bearings? Piston in hard jaws in vise? hmmmm.....
Sanding bearings? Piston in hard jaws in vise? hmmmm.....