So lately it feels like I work on my friends junk more than mine. I spent my day off putting a motor together for a buddy. He lost an oil pump about 2 years ago in his 6.0 Chevy 1500HD. He drove it for a while with low oil pressure before we were able to get a pump in, after we got the pump in it was too late. So the truck sat for a while and a few months ago, he yanked the engine and started the build.
Took the stock bottom end LQ4, had it rebuilt and refreshed with new stuff and ARP rod bolts, stuck some 243 heads on it, and a small Texas Speed cam (so he could keep the stock stall), and the fancy oil pump and timing chain the LS1 guys love to run. Truck already has LT headers, a Fast LSXRT 102mm intake, and KN intake tube.
Got it together ran and it like a champ, idled and drove great and was really tame. It even made 355whp and similar torque through a 4L80E and 14 Bolt.
It lasted 800 miles and let go, piston broke, bearings and crank are trashed. He found a freshly built LQ4 with a big cam in it and got it cheap, so we are switching over the good stuff from his original motor to the "new" motor.
Where we left off last time.
Almost stripped, all that wast left was to pull the fancy rod bolts out for the new motor and yank the rods and pistons to sell the block.
"New" motor on the stand. Pull the head studs, clean the E36 M3 out of the deck, bores and heads, along with anything we can reach with a rag ( the motor has been left open for a while), reinstall studs. It took us a few hours to get it cleaned up, owner requested no abrasives be used on the deck, so we scraped and scrubbed with acetone A BUNCH, before it was acceptable.
Gaskets on, drop the heads on, torque the heads down, install timing chain and check timing, get the valve train on, and install valley cover. Last thing we need to do is up front, just get the oil pump and front cover on. So we pull the pump apart to clean and inspect it, little metal but all cleaned up, we put the pump on and install the pump gears, then go to put the oil pump cover on and one of the bolts is covered in aluminum. It pulled all the threads out. This is the first time this pump has been apart since he got it from TSP, so we hit a dead end.
Dropped the VCs on and put a trash bag over it to seal it up. Hes gonna call Texas Speed tomorrow and see if they will do anything about the oil pump, if not we have an OE one and a Melling, one of those will get ported and shimmed to up pressure, kinda hoping TSP will help him out though. So next time we just need to get the new pump on and timing cover, then the machine shop is gonna put the new rod bolts on for him so they can check the stretch. After that shes ready to go in, it takes us about 4 or 5 hours to get it in, dressed and ready to fire, so its close.
Then we just need to get some Electric fans on (to replace the fan clutch) and figure out why his expense ass throttle body and x link are causing a check engine light, he's been rocking the stock 76mm TB on the big ass FAST intake because he got tired of screwing with it.
FYI he hates his FAST as much as I hated trying to install mine, his was a WAY bigger nightmare than mine.