Wildguzzi.com
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: Bobbilljim on April 30, 2017, 01:34:33 AM
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:embarassed:
Ok, Here goes (he said with his head hung low)....
Driving hime from work in roughly 80F weather in AZ on the highway cruising along happy and dumb at 70 mph. A nice fellow pulls up along side and yells something to me. I ask for confirmation and he tells me i have sprung a coolant leak. (He must know more about the Cow II than I...) So I look down and behold a shiny glistening over everything. Even the flat black plastic. Hmmmm, has to be oil. More on the left than the right. And then I noticed the clackity clack as I changed lanes to get off at my exit. It was happening long enough I had to put a quart or more back in I think. But it happened. An oil line on the left cyclinder had burst and I had no idea. I have an after market digital gage since the original was long since gone that I THOUGHT had a dummy light. Apparently, this wasnt the case. I misread the symbol that represented oil Temp. Not pressure. Anyways, with the arizona sun beating down Im not sure I would have noticed it either way. So I ordered a new line and cleaned off all the oil. I know I am going to run into issues but has anyone seen what this looks like already and can give me a "getting started" grocery list? Sweet tea is at the top as I am not an avid beer fan. Mostly just Bourbon if Im not doing anything important. Anyways, Im sure new pushrods and lifters. Crank bearings and connection rods? Crank? Or do I just send the whole thing to Harper? I am a mechanic by trade but not a machinist. Anyways. Any help would be appreciated.
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I'm a bit confused, so the left head was oil starved? For how long? You don't say what model but guess I'd start by inspecting the rocker on that side, maybe is not as bad as you imagine?
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Its hard to say how much your oil pressure dropped with the head line leaking. Was the line completely severed, and shooting oil in a huge stream, or was it partially cut, and just leaking some ? The latter happened to my Cal II a couple of years ago with no ill effects, but I didnt run it long, lost maybe half a liter of oil.
Like Foto suggested , I would take a look at the rocker arms/pins, you could also drop the pan, and look for any debris, and also pop off a rod cap to look at the bearing/crank journal.
look for any signs of heat damage. The Guzzi lumps are pretty tough, yours may not be as bad as you think....or if you are lucky , may get away with just replacing the oil lines.
Buy the good ones , not the "cheapies". I had a cheap one fail at a connection after a year.
Rick
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I apologize for my forgetfulness, i have picked up the topic here with more current details....
http://wildguzzi.com/forum/index.php?topic=93479.0