"KaptnSmooth" post=823522 wrote:
I read your posts about a dead cylinder but failed to understand what repair(s) were made. I have '99 Capri 2052 LSD that I tried to winterize 2 years ago. I open the large hose off of the water pump and dump the lake water out as much as possible (warm engine), then keep dumping antifreeze in and running the motor until I get about 2 gallons of AF into it. Problem is the starter would turn the engine over a few times, then bang to an abrupt stop. I had a much older Chaparral with the same GM 305 V8 and assumed the same starter. I was sure there must be flywheel must have a damaged tooth so procrastinated in removing the starter to see how bad it was. This newer engine has a gear reduction starter and I now also know the gear reduction section of the starter went bad and was jammed.
I apparently didn't get the engine as winterized as I thought because now I have a dead cylinder on the left bank. The engine starts and runs seemingly well but in the water it has no power and will not throttle up. No water is coming from the engine into the bilge so the frost plugs are intact. I am hoping you bought a "Genie In A Can" somewhere and it fixed your dead cylinder? Tell me it's so... Second best, does someone know what is the first thing go when a coolant freeze takes place? A head gasket would obviously be cheaper than an engine block replacement. My current engine has Vortec heads that I was also oblivious to before replacing the plugs, wires, cap and rotor in recent days. I am shortly going to take it to the shop and bite the bullet, hoping for the best.
Thanks,
Tim A.
I read your posts about a dead cylinder but failed to understand what repair(s) were made. I have '99 Capri 2052 LSD that I tried to winterize 2 years ago. I open the large hose off of the water pump and dump the lake water out as much as possible (warm engine), then keep dumping antifreeze in and running the motor until I get about 2 gallons of AF into it. Problem is the starter would turn the engine over a few times, then bang to an abrupt stop. I had a much older Chaparral with the same GM 305 V8 and assumed the same starter. I was sure there must be flywheel must have a damaged tooth so procrastinated in removing the starter to see how bad it was. This newer engine has a gear reduction starter and I now also know the gear reduction section of the starter went bad and was jammed.
I apparently didn't get the engine as winterized as I thought because now I have a dead cylinder on the left bank. The engine starts and runs seemingly well but in the water it has no power and will not throttle up. No water is coming from the engine into the bilge so the frost plugs are intact. I am hoping you bought a "Genie In A Can" somewhere and it fixed your dead cylinder? Tell me it's so... Second best, does someone know what is the first thing go when a coolant freeze takes place? A head gasket would obviously be cheaper than an engine block replacement. My current engine has Vortec heads that I was also oblivious to before replacing the plugs, wires, cap and rotor in recent days. I am shortly going to take it to the shop and bite the bullet, hoping for the best.
Thanks,
Tim A.
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