Oil leak

demetri e

New Member
Jun 22, 2013
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Novice here , getting oil spray all over I'm guessing from oil hitting belts, noticed it puddling up behind water pump? Is that a hard gasket to change?
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Not that easy to answer, it could be as easy as the o ring on the distributor (doubtful) or the timing cover leaking, more likely the front of the intake manifold gasket has dried up, what are we working on and how many miles?
 
Your PCV filter could be clogged. The resultant crankcase pressure could be blowing out the cork gaskets if they're still the originals. This was the case with my '90 Grand Marquis. The engine was covered in caked on dirt and oil (valve covers, timing cover, front accessories, etc.). The filter was completely clogged and came out in pieces.
 
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You will need to clean all that gunk off as best you can then plan on replacing timing cover, valve cover, intake gaskets and replacing the pcv valve amd the screen under it, hopefully you will not need oil pan gasket and rear main seal but likely you will,
Be prepared to replace the water pump/timing cover bolts, they are know to break.
Vacuum lines probably will need replacement too.
Welcome to the club. :D
 
You will need to clean all that gunk off as best you can then plan on replacing timing cover, valve cover, intake gaskets and replacing the pcv valve amd the screen under it, hopefully you will not need oil pan gasket and rear main seal but likely you will,
Be prepared to replace the water pump/timing cover bolts, they are know to break.
Vacuum lines probably will need replacement too.
Welcome to the club. :D
That's why I'm thinking of going with a crate engine because I have no knowledge of what was done to this motor or how old anything is , just wanna do things right and not spend a fortune on paying to do all gsskets especially rear seal and oil.pan
 
That's why I'm thinking of going with a crate engine because I have no knowledge of what was done to this motor or how old anything is , just wanna do things right and not spend a fortune on paying to do all gsskets especially rear seal and oil.pan

Regardless of what's been done to the engine,...fixing an oil leak is gonna be cheaper than spending a fortune buying a crate engine. Any competent mechanic can fix a rear main seal leak in a day,..and tell you how healthy the engine is before you spend a dime doing that.

What's the point of asking for advice when you've made your mind up anyway?
 
Regardless of what's been done to the engine,...fixing an oil leak is gonna be cheaper than spending a fortune buying a crate engine. Any competent mechanic can fix a rear main seal leak in a day,..and tell you how healthy the engine is before you spend a dime doing that.

What's the point of asking for advice when you've made your mind up anyway?
I've gone the wrong way before with spending money on my cars , I'm gonna try and tackle some of the gaskets myself , it's not the rear main seal most of the oil is puddle behind the water pump
 
If you aren't having cooling or charging issues, I'd let the pillows go. If you do have either of those issue, go back to stock pillows. Underdrives aren't worth the loss of reliability.

As for the FP guage, it's a source of potential leak and fire. You can't really see it while you drive so really you should just install it when troubleshooting. Underhood fires due to gas leaks are a real concern. I've been reading a few posts about the rubber line on the fuel rail springing a leak. 30 years and e10 gas are starting to take its toll
 
Stock pillows? Really? My aftermarket pillows are so comfortable!
Autocorrect is a btch.
I think he means pulleys.
as for the fp gauge, the vibration causes the gauge to crack when attached to the schrader valve and spew fuel and we all know what happens after that. Use a braided hose and mount the gauge to the fender apron, they make electronic fp gauges put they are pricey.
 
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