CAPTAIN FANTASTIC
Well-Known Member
+1So would i, be silly not to IMO.
I'd also pop the pistons out, give the bores a very light hone and put new rings in.
+1So would i, be silly not to IMO.
I'd also pop the pistons out, give the bores a very light hone and put new rings in.
"Cylinders/liners are bored as a taper" really?Depending on the tools & information you have (good torque wrench and engine manual), and your confidence/ability, I would drop a couple of bearing caps (mains & big ends) and inspect the mains, bigs and thrust bearings for wear.
Whilst you have the engine down this far I would also replace the front and rear crankshaft oil seal simply as good engineering practice. If possible, rotate the flywheel one set of bolts round so that the starter motor contacts the ring gear in a different place (an old trick but still works).
I wouldn't advise filling the cylinders with diesel - all it will do is make a mess. Cylinders/liners are bored as a taper, ever so slightly larger diameter at the bottom than the top - this is so that the liner becomes dimensionally identical once the engine is up to operating temperature (greater heat at the top of the cylinder will cause greater expansion in that area). Plus as it is a cold engine the ring gaps will be so large the diesel will just work past.
As mentioned in an earlier post, a small amount of end play (inline with crank) movement is desired (and required), but there should not be any movement vertically around the bearing journals.
If you have had oil in the coolant this is most likely from the head gasket, but a possibility could be an oil cooler if you have one fitted (it's been too many years and I can't remember on the MD21). Definitely send the head away for cleaning, measuring and pressure testing - the shops that do this are specialists and will be able to tell you if it is cracked or needs to be skimmed. Make sure they do hot pressure testing as some cracks only leak when up to temperature.
If the head requires skimming then I would get a proper straight-edge and also check the block face for bow & twist - a straight head on a warped block will still leak!
Regarding painting - it's expensive but the genuine VP green paint is very good. Some good primer and this and the engine will look like new - if you can get over the price tag per can! ;-)
"Cylinders/liners are bored as a taper" really?

Yes. My MGB engine is one such (the BMC B series engine was used for many marine conversions). I just fitted a new piston and whilst being standard bore I did check the piston clearance at the top and bottom of the cylinder. Just for interest. The ring gap increases the lower down the bore you measure it.Yes. I did my apprenticeship and first few years of work at Sabre (Perkins), where we used to machine the blocks for the Ford Sabre engines. Sabre, Perkins and the Seatek engines were all bored to have tighter tolerance at the top of the cylinder than the bottom. This was due to increased temperatures (due to combustion process and as the bottom of the cylinder gets greater cooling from lubrication) at the top of the cylinder causing greater thermal expansion.
Factory tolerances almost always call for a small amount of cylinder taper, it's less on modern engines due to tighter tolerances and improved design, but on an older design engine is much greater. I can't remember the specs now - and it's a moot point as the Sabre specs will be different from the VP ones. But if you have a proper bore micrometer it is measurable.