Jump to content

Geoff Weeks

Pedigreed Bulldog
  • Posts

    2,586
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    7

Geoff Weeks last won the day on September 17 2025

Geoff Weeks had the most liked content!

About Geoff Weeks

Location

  • Location
    western Iowa

Profile Fields

  • My Truck
    1992 Marmon

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

Geoff Weeks's Achievements

Grand Master

Grand Master (14/14)

  • Problem Solver Rare
  • One Year In
  • Posting Machine Rare
  • Very Popular Rare
  • One Month Later

Recent Badges

2.4k

Reputation

20

Community Answers

  1. It shouldn't get hot, but it can. the surface area where the windings connect to the stud is small. Solder has worked for me, but if I was going to do it over, I would use silver solder. Absolutely necessary? no, my starters are proof of that. I just feel it is worth the effort. It will take future stiff nut threads breaking the soft solder. Where he is putting in new windings, I'd go the extra mile.
  2. The issue /question is can you get the stud in place with the field welded to it? I hadn't pulled my field pole shoes, so there was very little room to work. With the pole shoes out you should a lot more room/options, but I didn't do it that way, I was just trying to repair a connection that had broke loose. With the pole shoes bolted in there isn't enough movement in the ends of the windings to do much more than depress the stud away from the case. So not having done any repair with the pole shoes out, I can't give concrete advice on what is possible.
  3. There isn't a lot of room in there, so I don't think there is a mechanical means to tie them to the stud. I tried propane and found it wasn't hot/concentrated enough. I used my smallest oxy tip and worked fast, but as I said, If I had to do over I'd use a jewelers torch. The way I did it worked, but was less than ideal. some of insulation wrap got hotter than I'd like. Mine still work just fine. Every time I have to crank a bit to prime, I cringe thinking "you dummy, you should have silver soldered it"! I'd "dry fit" the field to the stud then push the stud away from the case and insulator (to minimize the heat transfer to the case) and solder.
  4. Silver Solder is a bridge between brazing and soldering. Silver content can vary with higher silver content having a higher melt point. In this application both the ability to hold the pole windings to the stud when heated and the ability of silver to conduct better then "soft solders" are a benefit.
  5. Joey, If I were to do it over again. I'd buy a "jeweler's" air-acetylene torch and a small tip. You need heat but in a smaller area then the typical oxy-acetylene, and go with silver solder. I think that way you'll have the best chance of a permanent repair regardless of what voltage/current draw passes through the connection. The key is the small, concentrated heat source.
  6. Last I looked brake bolt were still available.
  7. Worse case you can order the raw materials from McMaster-Carr. Brake lining material and rivets.
  8. blank lining can be cut, formed, drilled for rivets, and counter sunk. I used to get brake shoes for the English buses re-lined, and there was no buying pre-made linings for them here. I assume there are still places (likely not as many) that do that. I cut bulk lining and drilled, counter-sunk and riveted brake bands for the semi-auto transmissions in the buses. Worked like a charm.
  9. I have used solder but I suspect silver solder would be better. At least you starting with all new and clean parts.
  10. One thing that came to me after a nights sleep. Have you had the pan off? These old engines with non-detergent oil allowed the sludge to accumulate in the bottom of the pan. The oil pick-up screen was designed to "float" above the bottom. (it actually pivots on its tube). If you haven't had the pan off, I would pull it and clean. On mine I wanted to re-bearing but being as old as it was thought I better look at the bearing size 1st. Dropped the pan and cleaned it out, sparkling clean. I put the pan back and it was a while before I found new bearings (may be a month of running) and was shocked at how much more junk had been washed into the pan again. P.S. 15w-40 works great, just don't try and start it after sitting at -23F all night on 6 volts with that in the sump, like I did. I was moving and we stopped at a motel, and the temp took a nose dive while we were sleeping. We had my Explorer also, so pull started it.
  11. It will, mine was 12 volt - when I bought it.
  12. Since the filter provides a restriction between the main oil rifle and the sump, removing will not change the pressure. the restriction in the housing limits the flow through the filter to the sump. a restricted filter would not change the pressure. You could try shimming the relief, but I would guess the bearing clearances are more likely. I can't remember if you went through the engine or not. Main bearing sets are hard to find and come in two types, thrust washer type and conventional rear main with thrust surface on the bearing shell. You can use either type, but you have to either remove the thrust washer retaining pin or notch the shell to clear the pin and leave it in place. On mine, I tend to think may be the oil pump shaft bushing may be worn and leaking pressure out of the pump past the shaft bushing. It tops out at about 40 PSI but hot it drops a bit.
  13. Although they are a bypass and don't do a great deal of filtering, I don't see any gain by not having it in there.
  14. No, no change to the valve cover. There is (on mine anyway) a 1/4" NPT port that is hooked to the air cleaner in the original set up. I remove this tube and the flare adapter in the valve cover and use a thread in PCV valve in its place and connect to the vacuum port on the manifold. So it draws air in through the fill cap metal gauze and the fumes out the valve to the manifold. As to oil filter, I have one, my 1942 has a Michiana with a paper element and two with a Deluxe with the "sock type" filter. I can get the paper element from Baldwin filters, and have a few sock filters. I had thought of making an adapter and fitting an industrial "Spinner" filter. The ones for trucks need air pressure to return the oil to the sump, the industrial versions are set for gravity return. Unless you want to re-route the oil from the oil pump to the main oil rifle, full flow filtering is not an option. I think you know the relief valve is in the filter adapter, so you can't remove the filter adapter as you'll be removing the relief valve as well. I think the socks are still available, but you may have to look a bit.
  15. It is what I use, and much better than anything they had "back in the day". I put a PCV system on mine and it helped alot keeping moisture out of the crankcase.
×
×
  • Create New...