CD Long Jr 106 #1 Posted yesterday at 06:06 PM I just wanna say you guys made a believer outta me! Look at the head bolts, they have Liquid wrench the entire length. That spray, hammer every time you walk by a wait a few days really works! Head bolts all seemed to be the same tightness. 2 whacks with the heel of my hand and they came loose. Put a pick under the head gasket & it popped right off. Exhaust valve has a lot of debris around it. Cylinder walls are smooth, no nicks or gouges. The mule pulley guard nut came off with the same technic. Pulleys spin freely. I don't understand why the belt wouldn't come thru them. Haven't tried the tension adjuster yet. Found the regulator mounting bolts are loose. 4 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
oliver2-44 11,132 #2 Posted yesterday at 06:26 PM Keep up the good revival/maintenance on that old horse 5 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handy Don 15,527 #3 Posted yesterday at 06:41 PM Nothing unusual jumping out at me from those images. Keep on going! Good to see no erosion of the head or piston near the exhaust valve, too. Lotsa life left in that engine. Note the “fire ring” of metal on the inner circumference of the head gasket. Ideally, your replacement should have the same feature as this makes for the longest-lasting seal. 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ebinmaine 76,356 #4 Posted yesterday at 07:42 PM 1 hour ago, CD Long Jr said: made a believer outta me! Look at the head bolts, they have Liquid wrench the entire length. That spray, hammer every time you walk by a wait a few days really works! Head bolts As I said in another post I've been using that - amongst other proven products - for years. Remember to replace the head bolts with new Grade 8 when reassembling. One other rusty bolt removal trick. TIGHTEN the bolt just a tiny bit. Then loosen. Repeat multiple times going a little more each time. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gwest_ca-(File Mod) 11,909 #5 Posted yesterday at 08:05 PM That last picture is likely the low oil relay. The regulator should be in the blower housing over the flywheel. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CD Long Jr 106 #6 Posted yesterday at 08:18 PM 1 hour ago, Handy Don said: Nothing unusual jumping out at me from those images. Keep on going! Good to see no erosion of the head or piston near the exhaust valve, too. Lotsa life left in that engine. Note the “fire ring” of metal on the inner circumference of the head gasket. Ideally, your replacement should have the same feature as this makes for the longest-lasting seal. I don't remember who, but one comment said to get a steel head asket. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CD Long Jr 106 #7 Posted yesterday at 08:28 PM 22 minutes ago, gwest_ca said: That last picture is likely the low oil relay. The regulator should be in the blower housing over the flywheel. Yes sir, it's a relay. My mistake. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CD Long Jr 106 #8 Posted yesterday at 08:30 PM Finished the head clean up. Found a use for the PB Blaster. Seems to cut carbon pretty good. Sprayed the head, waited 30 minutes and hit it with the Dremel using SS brushes. 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
peter lena 9,633 #9 Posted yesterday at 09:09 PM @CD Long Jr good going on that mr long ! totally agree on the exposed condition , would take advantage of that , with that rislone , zinc varnish cutting action , enhance that , and helps maintain clean / clear rings , think I would start it off with a 10-30 shell rotella, for a lubrication heating transition , for initial engine wake up . get some time on it , would bet that engine will be happy . would also change out that rubber hose fuel set up , probably totally broken down , the more of it you change out , the better . also a tank cleaning , remove the tank lower fuel valve , replace it , like a filter just after fuel valve ,and another close to carb . you are doing very good , your not crazy , we are , pete 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handy Don 15,527 #10 Posted yesterday at 09:55 PM 1 hour ago, CD Long Jr said: I don't remember who, but one comment said to get a steel head asket. The fire ring and metal-clad gasket is what the commenter meant. There is gasket material as a middle layer between the metal outer layers. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ri702bill 10,885 #11 Posted yesterday at 10:39 PM What I see is the engine is worn but not worn out. As Don said, there is plenty of good life left in it. The "clean" side of the piston top is common, tends to run a little cooler than the exhaust side. The clean ring does not go completely around the top of the piston - that's good. Rings are somewhat worn but doing their job. Turn the engine over by hand to where the exhaust valve is the highest off the seat. Inspect & clean the valve face & seat. Severe pitting or any cracks require a partial teardown... The metal fire ring is found on the OE head gasket - newer versions do not have it.... 2 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CD Long Jr 106 #12 Posted yesterday at 10:43 PM 2 minutes ago, ri702bill said: What I see is the engine is worn but not worn out. As Don said, there is plenty of good life left in it. The "clean" side of the piston top is common, tends to run a little cooler than the exhaust side. The clean ring does not go completely around the top of the piston - that's good. Rings are somewhat worn but doing their job. Turn the engine over by hand to where the exhaust valve is the highest off the seat. Inspect & clean the valve face & seat. Severe pitting or any cracks require a partial teardown... The metal fire ring is found on the OE head gasket - newer versions do not have it.... Will do. Thank you. More before & after pics of the valves tomorrow. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
8ntruck 8,449 #13 Posted 23 hours ago @ri702bill Does your description of the appearance apply, in general, to all small F head engines? I've got a KT19 and a late 60's 10 horse B&S that I am planning on doing some work on later this spring. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ri702bill 10,885 #14 Posted 23 hours ago For the horizontal shaft versions, yes. Vertical shaft models have similar, but not identical issues. I ruined a 6.75 HP Tecumseh LEV by not decarboning it. A large chunk of loose carbon fell to the bottom - the cylinder wall - and scored it so badly it had almost no compression... 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kpinnc 16,461 #15 Posted 16 hours ago Looks great so far to me. You've got a solid machine and it looks like you are doing everything right. Keep it up and this tractor will last another 30+ years! 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
WHX?? 53,596 #16 Posted 9 hours ago 19 hours ago, Handy Don said: Note the “fire ring” of metal on the inner circumference of the head gasket. 15 hours ago, ri702bill said: The metal fire ring is found on the OE head gasket Yes and I have yet to find those gaskets in the 8 HP flavor. Big blocks most all aftermarket ones ... like Stens ... have it. I would glass the head before putting it back on. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
8ntruck 8,449 #17 Posted 8 hours ago 14 hours ago, ri702bill said: For the horizontal shaft versions, yes. Vertical shaft models have similar, but not identical issues. I ruined a 6.75 HP Tecumseh LEV by not decarboning it. A large chunk of loose carbon fell to the bottom - the cylinder wall - and scored it so badly it had almost no compression... Ah. The KT19 has horizontally opposed cylinders, so it would be more like a vertical shaft engine. Guess I'll move that one ahead of the 10 hp B&S in the work list. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites