Mk1 engine woes, possible cracked block??

Mk1 engine woes, possible cracked block??

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Boobonman

Original Poster:

5,654 posts

192 months

Tuesday 24th May 2016
quotequote all
I'll try and keep this as succinct as poss, car is a 1992 Eunos 1.6 bought with query HGF.
I removed the head and sent it for a pressure test / skim, water jackets looked really manky and furred up, maybe had radweld or something through it before?
Head replaced with new head gasket, new water pump, belts etc.
Starts straight up, idle adjusted, seems to run fine, no fluid leaks or anything.
Took for half hour test drive, no problem other than some steam from rad cap after switching off, I assume this is an air lock.
Next day go back out for another test run having topped rad up, runs fine but after approx half hr seems down on power,shortly after down to two cylinders and James Bond style smoke screen from exhaust. Limp to layby, switch off.
Seems to have consumed all the water in the rad.

What can I do next from a diagnosis point of view? I assume the engine block is cracked or I have badly messed up somewhere fitting the head gasket. If it was the latter though, surely it wouldn't have run so well after going back together?

Any help greatly relieved.

TL;DR - head gasket replaced 20 miles ago, seemed to cure, now have even worse HGF symptoms


drgoatboy

1,624 posts

207 months

Tuesday 24th May 2016
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Not really answering your question but....
Sounds like you are quite handy with the spanners, why not just get a new engine?
Can be picked up for as little as £100.

Bertrum

467 posts

223 months

Tuesday 24th May 2016
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take the head off and inspect.

Impossible to tell otherwise.

Possible that the head was incorrectly torqued or as you say you have a cracked block. You will need to take the whole thing apart now anyway to get the water out of the oil.

Boobonman

Original Poster:

5,654 posts

192 months

Tuesday 24th May 2016
quotequote all
I'm not that handy with the spanners, I'm fortunate enough that one of my best mates is an ex-Mazda tech and has the luxury of a double garage and snap on tools.

The reason I didn't swap the engine initially was that the lump in it seemed quite strong and peppy and I thought a £50 gasket set would cure the problem. A warranted engine is £400+ vat from Autolink (could probably get it cheaper for cash) and with a cheaper engine off eBay it's an unknown quantity.

With regards to having a look once the head is off, when we changed the gasket it was clear that the gasket had seen better days and there was evidence of water getting into one of the cylinders as the valve seats were a slightly different colour. The Pistons and stuff all looked OK as far as I could see, and would a crack in the block necessarily be a) external and b) visible to the naked eye?

Boobonman

Original Poster:

5,654 posts

192 months

Tuesday 24th May 2016
quotequote all
Vladd, how would a leaking hose cause the water to get in to the combustion chamber?

mad4amanda

2,410 posts

164 months

Tuesday 24th May 2016
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Never seen or heard of a cracked block on this engine , HGF are rare enough normally issues are scaled rads and rotten hoses stats and rad caps failing and water pump failure rarely. Yours must have been really abused to fail twice like that did you get the head checked for warpage when you had it pressure tested? is it a 1600 or 1800?

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 25th May 2016
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Are all the head bolts still tight?

I rebuilt the engine in a 92 1.6 that I used to own. The engine was a replacement I fitted when I bought the car, came from a recon company (never again). Found 2 issues - first was that the company that "reconditioned" the engine hadn't bothered to skim the head. It lasted 5 years amazingly but finally the HG started leak pretty badly.

Second issue was that the engineering company that re-skimmed it for me supplied the wrong length bolts, they were slightly too short and although they torqued up OK and all was fine at first but one bolt came loose after a few hot-cold cycles and it leaked again. I didn't think to compare the bolts to the old ones when I fitted them as the thing had been in pieces for quite a while, not a mistake I will make again I hope.

Once skimmed yet again and with the correct bolts it was then good as new and lasted until the car rusted away to nothing (about a year hehe )

Boobonman

Original Poster:

5,654 posts

192 months

Wednesday 25th May 2016
quotequote all
The head was skimmed and pressure tested.

I think I didn't do the head bolts up enough, from memory they were a bugger to crack off, and I think we put too much trust in an ageing torque wrench to do them up to the right level.

I reckon with my recent practice I can have the head off in a couple of hours, plan is to disassemble, check for obvious carnage and damage to new gasket, re-assemble with much tighter head bolts, coolant flush and then cross fingers.

I will endeavour to keep you updated, your input has been much appreciated.

MX-5 Lazza

7,952 posts

219 months

Friday 27th May 2016
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Did you use a Mazda OEM head gasket or an aftermarket one? It's one of those parts it's not worth skimping on as the OEM ones are great but a lot of aftermarket ones are very poor.

Boobonman

Original Poster:

5,654 posts

192 months

Friday 10th June 2016
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Started again with new HG, new inlet manifold gasket, and carefully re-torqued head bolts in three stages. Cold, hot,cold.Also changed oil, filter, coolant, plugs etc

I'm about 300 miles in and running really well, thanks for all tips and advice 👍🏼

mad4amanda

2,410 posts

164 months

Friday 10th June 2016
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are you still using the same head bolts ? I always change them every time!

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 11th June 2016
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I swapped mine but was later assured that I could have re-used them as they were not stretch bolts. Still not sure what is correct about the bolts. They certainly didn't feel like they were under great stress when torqued up, unlike the head bolts on my old Toyota Surf diesel that required about 4000nm and then 2 further 90 degree turns and a 6 foot extension on the torque wrench smile

Boobonman

Original Poster:

5,654 posts

192 months

Saturday 11th June 2016
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Well I'm lucky enough to have both Autolink and Skuzzle Motorsport on my doorstep, and Andrew at Autolink has been an invaluable technical advisor. Nice enough not to laugh at some of my ineptitude too clap

one eyed mick

1,189 posts

161 months

Saturday 11th June 2016
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JimSuperSix said:
I swapped mine but was later assured that I could have re-used them as they were not stretch bolts. Still not sure what is correct about the bolts. They certainly didn't feel like they were under great stress when torqued up, unlike the head bolts on my old Toyota Surf diesel that required about 4000nm and then 2 further 90 degree turns and a 6 foot extension on the torque wrench smile
4000 nm ?that is an amazing figure worked on many deisels but never came across any thing that tight ! too many o's?