where is the oil pressure relief spring located?
where is the oil pressure relief spring located?
Author
Discussion

tony cerbera

Original Poster:

67 posts

155 months

Monday 11th June 2018
quotequote all
my oil light has come on and oil gauge shows zero pressure, the oil level is fine. Where is the oil pressure relief spring located on a 4.2 cerbera please? any pictures would be a big help. I want to replace it and see if this is the problem to gauge and light, thanks for any advice.

schimg

1,923 posts

275 months

Monday 11th June 2018
quotequote all
Hi,
From memory' I believe it is accessed underneath the car on the drivers side,
We replaced mine about 6 years ago, the retaining bolt was well stuck in place, so much so we were concerned about cracking the surrounding case, so I sprayed releasing fluid every couple of night for a week before we had a final go, thankfully it worked the spring was shot though....
Good luck,
Steve.G.

The Nige

177 posts

211 months

Monday 11th June 2018
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Circled in red may be what you are looking for.

Cheers

Nigel

gruffalo

8,075 posts

248 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
You can get to it if you take the drivers side front wheel off, 24mm spanner iifc.


gruffalo

8,075 posts

248 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
Are you the chap on Facebook with zero oil pressure?

If so I fear the relief Spring is not your issue, I would expect a reduced oil pressure from a broken spring or stuck piston in the relief valve not a total loss.

It sounds like the pump may not be turning which would initially point to a failure in the auxiliary shaft probably a failed woodruff key.


notaping

457 posts

93 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
I had a similar issue last year where the pressure dropped off over a period of 10 miles or so. Turned out it was a blocked strainer in the sump. Engine out.

ukkid35

6,378 posts

195 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
gruffalo said:
Are you the chap on Facebook with zero oil pressure?

If so I fear the relief Spring is not your issue, I would expect a reduced oil pressure from a broken spring or stuck piston in the relief valve not a total loss.

It sounds like the pump may not be turning which would initially point to a failure in the auxiliary shaft probably a failed woodruff key.
My experience of zero oil pressure

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...


Byker28i

82,759 posts

239 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
It's worth checking the spring first as a cheap fix, but usually the reading goes low, not zero?

TwinKam

3,451 posts

117 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
...and mine was the drive gear shearing off the nose of the pumps' driveshaft inside the timing cover. The three pumps share a common drive.
Was your PAS working last time it ran? Did it overheat? My first check would be a quick visual to see if the PAS pump is turning with the engine, turn the crank over 'by hand' if you don't want to start the engine. If it is turning, then that eliminates the drive side of things to all pumps. If it's not, it could be just the last part of the drive to the PAS pump, but it could also be driving none.

gruffalo

8,075 posts

248 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
ukkid35 said:
Wow mine just went low, 15psi tick over and 30 when running at 2000 rpm.


gruffalo

8,075 posts

248 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
TwinKam said:
...and mine was the drive gear shearing off the nose of the pumps' driveshaft inside the timing cover. The three pumps share a common drive.
Was your PAS working last time it ran? Did it overheat? My first check would be a quick visual to see if the PAS pump is turning with the engine, turn the crank over 'by hand' if you don't want to start the engine. If it is turning, then that eliminates the drive side of things to all pumps. If it's not, it could be just the last part of the drive to the PAS pump, but it could also be driving none.
The rocking the engine and making sure the PAS pump turns would be my next thing to try so at least you know the pump is turning.


tony cerbera

Original Poster:

67 posts

155 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
gruffalo said:
Are you the chap on Facebook with zero oil pressure?

If so I fear the relief Spring is not your issue, I would expect a reduced oil pressure from a broken spring or stuck piston in the relief valve not a total loss.

It sounds like the pump may not be turning which would initially point to a failure in the auxiliary shaft probably a failed woodruff key.
Hi, I am the chap from Facebook

gruffalo

8,075 posts

248 months

Wednesday 13th June 2018
quotequote all
tony cerbera said:
Hi, I am the chap from Facebook
It would be worth trying Twincams suggestion, otherwise send it off to the people you normally trust to service it.


Mr Cerbera

5,148 posts

252 months

Thursday 21st June 2018
quotequote all
You could always check

A -the pressure switch
B- Feed to the pressure gauge

Under the Ignition Coils, if you're bored laugh



Edited by Mr Cerbera on Tuesday 27th September 17:52