Well the best laid plans of mice and men blah blah blah
All afternoon out there pottering around, everything seized and needed lots of heat and penetrating fluids, currently defeated by the crank timing belt pulley as I lent out my puller and forgot all about it
To make matters worse I have found that the oils seals on the back of the timing case are shot and leaking into the timing case, it was a real mess in there
Some pics of where we are up to now.
Dumped all the coolant and removed the hoses, radiator and intercooler.
Removed the alternator and the PAS pump.
Breaker bar and the 30mm socket on the crank pulley bolt, I put a ratchet strap on it to ensure it was steady.
Ordinarily you should be able to lock the crank pulley up as I have and be able to remove the 4 M8 bolts that secure the pulley to the dampner but I was only able to remove 3 of the 4 and the lat one rounded off, typical really
Remove the stop solenoid feed.
Flick of the key and a big bang later the bolt is free and can be unwound by hand, the pulley, if you're lucky will pull off by hand, if not, you'll need a puller.
Removed the water pump and I noticed a lot of rusty rubbish on the threads so decided to run a die over the threads to clear it all off before I started trying to remove the front cover.
Inside the front cover shows how disgusting it is inside the timing case, very oily.
It was this point that I came to the conclusion that I needed to strip out the whole time chest and do the oil seals in it and the water gallery gasket between the chest and the block.
Put the timing pin in the pump, time the cam to the punch mark on the pulley and the web of the timing chest and the crank pulley to pointer on the back of the timing chest.
Once it's timed at the front, I slid under the truck and put the locking pin in the flywheel.
I've removed the cam pulley and the injection pump pulley, I lent out my puller so have been unable to get the crank pulley off, but I have been busy with the Gunk degreaser and cleaner getting rid of all the oil residues in the casing I could get to.
All that's left is to remove the three bolts out the bottom of the timing case that go through the block stiffening ladder and the sump and then use a puller to remove the crank pulley and then we're home free, well, not quite, still gotta put it all back together again.
Oh, and get that rounded off bolt out of the crank dampner.