I'd forgotten I'd started this thread.
As the engine although running (actually quite well), still isn't perfect. I've decided to sort it again, only properly this time.
It took several months of looking, but a decent replacement head came up for sale. It's a 9000 mile 2015 SD4 head, which came complete with cams, followers, and the important matching bearing ladder!! This head cost me just £310 delivered, which was an absolute bargain. It's just a shame that nothing like this was available, when I actually needed it, but that's the law of sod coming into play.
So as I'm between jobs (I do start a brilliant new job next week
), I thought I'd get on with doing the head swap, which I'd been putting off since April, when I got the new head.
So yesterday I started pulling the engine apart again, although thankfully I don't have to take the bottom end apart this time.
Now these DW12 engines aren't for the faint hearted, as they're complicated, with loads of components to get out the way, so the head can be removed.
Even the head requires stripping down, to get at the head bolts.
So it's an absolute nightmare to work on, and being that it's so high of the ground, I need a step stool to get at the back of the engine.
To remove the head, everything needs to be removed.
The timing belt, the engine mounts, the intake manifold, the exhaust manifold, the EGR valve/cooler assembly, the combined low pressure fuel/vacuum pump (it's cam shaft driven), the HP pump (also cam shaft driven), the HP fuel rail, the injectors (I left them connected to the rail to prevent them draining), the starter needs to come off, so the flywheel can be locked in the timing position, and about a million different electrical plugs and harness clips, and the cooling system needs draining too.
As the service is due in 15 days, I'll take the opportunity to change the oil and replace the filter as its is almost impossible to get at with the inlet manifold in place.
I'll also take the opportunity to see how the replacement piston is bedding in, as it was second hand, and I didn't trust the Chinese rings I got for it.
Here's some pictures of the engine as it comes apart.