Rusty Bowtie
General Category => General Discussion - Intros => Topic started by: Rattiac on March 08, 2025, 07:32:15 PM
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Had a super nice 67 camaro in our shop getting some work done.
The employee of the shop that brought it, said it had 350k into it.
When it left, ,,, it left a huge puddle of oil 🛢behind.
So don't feel bad when yours leaks oil. Even expensive cars leak oil. 😉
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When i rebuilt the 283 in my 57, i had it bored .060 over.
When i put it together i got the old motor manual out and read all i could find on rope rear main. Was maticulous on assembly. Oil leak at rear main. Luckily on the 57, all you had to do was drop the drag link and pan was clear. Got a new rope seal and repeat, oil leak. Luckily got another new rope called my old mechanic/machinist, and he came down and did it his way. Oil leak😡 Dad found a guys ad in Hemmings motor news and he made a 2 piece rubber main seal and garanteed it to not leak. I sent him my $8.00 and installed it..... no leak at all😁 In the time i had that car, not a drip of oil or anything else at all.
When i restored my brothers 67 RS conv for his wedding present, i replaced the heads. I headed to California for wedding. Got into Arizona as the sun was coming up and seen light smoke and could smell burning oil. Jumped up on off ramp to check, oil all over the back of engine dripping on exhaust. I had tools etc in trunk, found a rest stop. Thought valve cover leak, nope. It was the rubber rear seal on the back of the intake. Tore all down to clean up and reseal. Couple young guys stopped to look at the car and walked up looked and said we get to the next town we'll call a tow truck for ya. I told them no thanks, just an oil leak i'll be done before long. It does look bad when you have air cleaner/valve covers/ distributor/ intake all laying on towels beside the car😁 i thanked them and in an hour and a half i passed them on I-40 waving big. I thru away the rubber and just sealed it with silicon atv. Found a car wash and got all the under carage clean. End of oil leak.
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Those rope seals. I had fairly good luck building engines for my Historic Racing 1964 Ford Cortina.
I asked a teacher from my trade school years, and he told me I need a mandrel. A mandrel? Yes, you need
to turn a piece of steel to the same diameter as the crankshaft.
I did that, pounded the rope seal down into its groove with the mandrel thing and a dead blow. Then cut
the ends of the seal oversize by laying a hack saw blade on the mating surface and cutting with a sharp
knife. Same procedure with the other rope.
The car never saw a lot of miles, but it was raced and revved past seven grand all the time at the track.
I had a leak once (on three engines), and I'd never promise to make a rope seal work.
I have the two part rear seal on my daily ('85 Chevrolet Caprice 305), and those seem to work without
any leaks, so if there would be that type for the Cortina engine, I'd have used them for sure.