Mercruiser V6 issues

RogersJetboat454

Commander
Joined
Jul 9, 2010
Messages
2,964
Re: Mercruiser V6 issues

I has 12 bolts at an angel holding the inlet manifold.

So it's pre-Vortec. If you answer my other questions, we may better narrow down the year. Or if you can find the correct serial number, that would be even better.

Personally I pre-lash the valves one cylinder at a time. I don't do the blanket "turn it to this position, and adjust these numbers". Are you getting oil pressure when you turn the engine over? It's important that the lifters have oil in them when you set lash.

When I set valves, I pick a cylinder to work on. I turn the crank, and watch the rocker arms for that cylinder move. When I see the intake rocker open, then close, I turn the crank a few more degrees (say 45-90?) after the close, then start adjusting the nuts. I spin the push rods with my fingers while tightening down it's respective nut. When I feel a little drag on the push rod, I know I'm relatively close to zero lash, and I give the nut about 1/4 turn after that. It has always gotten me in the ball park where the engine will run pretty well.


I don't know what year it is..... don't think it had a balance shaft..... any way I can check from the outside?

Not so much from the outside, although if you have a plastic timing cover, that's an indicator that you have a balance shaft engine. If it had a balance shaft, you should have noticed something a little different when the intake was off. The balance shaft is a cast iron rod with offset weights. It lives above the lifters in the lifter valley. As much as I loathe Autozone, they have pictures of what the inside of a balance shaft engine looks like here; | Repair Guides | Engine Mechanical Components | Balance Shaft | AutoZone.com
 

TilliamWe

Banned
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Dec 21, 2004
Messages
6,579
Re: Mercruiser V6 issues

... I left the crank it because the bottom pulley didn't want to come off, someone else had been then and round all the bolts. So I worked around the crank...

I am not a machinist, or even a real mechanic, but this does not sound like a good idea to me. How can you possibly tell that the main bearing are okay (after sitting in saltwater and the motor seized up) if you haven't looked at them?
 

Tail_Gunner

Admiral
Joined
Jan 13, 2006
Messages
6,237
Re: Mercruiser V6 issues

I am not a machinist, or even a real mechanic, but this does not sound like a good idea to me. How can you possibly tell that the main bearing are okay (after sitting in saltwater and the motor seized up) if you haven't looked at them?
.




after sitting in saltwater and the motor seized up) and you haven't looked at them.........:facepalm:
 

achris

More fish than mountain goat
Joined
May 19, 2004
Messages
27,468
Re: Mercruiser V6 issues

How did you clean the block after honing it? (with the crank in)
How did you 'check' the mains? (with the crank in)
Did the crank spin ok without any rods attached? Did the crank spin ok with the rods and pistons attached (before the heads went on)?
The easiest way to know if you have a balance shaft engine is to look in the valley when the intake manifold was off. You see the camshaft or a funny looking shaft with counter-weights on it?

After seizing (with SALT water), that engine needs to be fully stripped. Drill the heads off the bolts and get the thing apart and cleaned up properly.

Chris........
 

achris

More fish than mountain goat
Joined
May 19, 2004
Messages
27,468
Re: Mercruiser V6 issues

Its a GM 4.3 LG - 10105867

I have isolated this number...

1987- ’94 WITHOUT BALANCE SHAFT: In 1987, a roller lifter cam was installed, so the block was changed again. Two bolt bosses were added in the middle of the valley for the lifter retainer that kept the rollers properly located on the cam and perpendicular to it. This same basic block was used through ’91 for everything, and in ’92 through ’94 for all of the engines without balance shafts except for one small difference – some of the blocks came with four bolt holes for the tunnel style retainer beginning in ’92. There were several different castings used, including the 10105867, 10172756, 14099073, 14093683 and 10066011 with the two-bolt retainer, and the 10172756, 14099073 and 10066061 blocks with the four-bolt retainer.

This is from this article on an Australian website.
 
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