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  • 1979 - 1995 (Fox, SN95.0, & 2.3L) -General/Talk-
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washing a machined block?

  • Thread starter Thread starter gabe3586
  • Start date Start date Dec 18, 2007

gabe3586

New Member
Aug 22, 2005
40
0
0
Dec 18, 2007
#1
  • Dec 18, 2007
  • #1
I am building my first motor from the ground up but ran into a question. Is power washing the block a really important key before assembling a shortblock? Why I ask is I put my engine together, its ready to drop in, but after reading some things it seems like alot of people recommend washing the shortblock before hand. Am I taking a risk here? is there anything else I could do to clean it while its assembled? Should I just bite the bullet and dissasemble every thing to clean it?It was machined at a very reputable machine shop here and looked very clean when I picked it up and though nothing of cleaning it.
 

91 HATCH

Banned
May 17, 2007
262
0
0
illinois
Dec 18, 2007
#2
  • Dec 18, 2007
  • #2
the shop cleansthe bocks after machine work most of the time they leave behind honing grit in the cylinder bores and maybe small metal flakes people usually clean it out

id say run it for 30 minutes to 1 hour and change the oil
 

NKau

Founding Member
Dec 15, 2001
1,346
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37
Jefferson, WI
Dec 18, 2007
#3
  • Dec 18, 2007
  • #3
Any decent machine shop should not give you back a freshly machined engine with shavings in coolant/oil passages.
 

samickguy15

Member
Sep 1, 2005
404
0
16
Delavan, IL
Dec 18, 2007
#4
  • Dec 18, 2007
  • #4
There's nothing wrong with washing a block. I would suggest hand and air drying it immediately afterwards. Then just coat it in some light oil to keep rust away.
 

PUNISHER RACING

Active Member
Aug 27, 2007
1,124
0
36
FORD CITY, PA.
Dec 18, 2007
#5
  • Dec 18, 2007
  • #5
wash it with dish detergent and purple power in hot water then dry it with an air hose and paint it, put motor oil on all the bores (cylinder,lifter) and decks.
 

Jason 302

10 Year Member
Aug 9, 2003
685
71
68
Newark, Ohio
Dec 18, 2007
#6
  • Dec 18, 2007
  • #6
Please, please dis-assemble it and wash it. You know those little white, fuzzy, bendy things people use for decorations? Get some of those and run it through your crank and block oil passages along with some hot soapy water, you'll thank me later. Punisher has it right, soak the block with purple power, get some hot soapy water and scrub the block down (don't forget your white fuzzys ). Rinse it off good, wipe off the machined surfaces (bores & deck) with a CLEAN lintless rag and quickly spray it down quickly with WD. Machined surfaces will start to rust almost instantly if you don't, be alert. Air hose the rest of the block dry, being sure to keep the WD handy. After your done drying wipe some oil in the bores and deck. Your block may look clean, but there are always places where dirt is hiding, just trust me.
 

Fast63

New Member
Sep 20, 2007
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0
0
Dec 19, 2007
#7
  • Dec 19, 2007
  • #7
Jason 302 said:
Please, please dis-assemble it and wash it. You know those little white, fuzzy, bendy things people use for decorations? Get some of those and run it through your crank and block oil passages along with some hot soapy water, you'll thank me later. Punisher has it right, soak the block with purple power, get some hot soapy water and scrub the block down (don't forget your white fuzzys ). Rinse it off good, wipe off the machined surfaces (bores & deck) with a CLEAN lintless rag and quickly spray it down quickly with WD. Machined surfaces will start to rust almost instantly if you don't, be alert. Air hose the rest of the block dry, being sure to keep the WD handy. After your done drying wipe some oil in the bores and deck. Your block may look clean, but there are always places where dirt is hiding, just trust me.
Click to expand...

LOL! White fuzzys = pipe cleaners
 

Jason 302

10 Year Member
Aug 9, 2003
685
71
68
Newark, Ohio
Dec 20, 2007
#8
  • Dec 20, 2007
  • #8
Fast63 said:
LOL! White fuzzys = pipe cleaners
Click to expand...

Haha, thats what they are! I couldn't think of the word
 
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