284 International
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2010
- Messages
- 1,464
- Tractor
- International Harvester 284
All of my tractors will pump fuel whether they are connected to an injector or not. If the number 2 line isn't pulsing fuel, but the others are, at least some of your roughness is accounted for. The pump needs some servicing, for sure. I have read that a little "percussive maintenance" with judicious hammer taps can loosen stuck plungers, but I don't know anything about it personally.
I DO know about doing the things one isn't supposed to do when rebuilding an engine to keep it on the cheap side.
. If the seats aren't hammered beyond repair, one can hand lap them so they seat cleanly again. The glass or granite discard suggestions for flat tables are superb, and what I have done. I have used Harbor Freight's cheap combination square as an improvised machinist square for checking the trueness of flywheels and engine blocks. It's not necessary to buy that one particularly, of course, I just happen to have one in my tool bag, and it has a variety of angles and shapes and sizes that work well on small engines with their sometimes unusual head stud arrangements or packaging in the frame. Machinist squares are better, but I use what I have at the time. With a set of feeler gauges, one can very easily determine if something will work or not. For me it's akin to a go/no-go headspacing gauge for a firearm. It tells you if it will worker not, but isn't best practice alone, either.
You'll hear this a lot, but make SURE to mark your rods and their bearing caps as to orientation and number. Front to front, etc. Since I'm prone to leave things for a long time, I usually do different colors of fingernail polish in slightly different spots, so colors and alignment have to match, on the crank or block and the bearing caps alike.
From my perspective, put new rings in it. The thing has worn the cross-hatching off, so the cylinder wall and the ring are smaller than they should be. The rings will have lost tension too; they can't seal as tightly as they ought no
matter what. It will start easier, too.
I'm pulling for you, I really hope you can get this beast back together. I'm envious of your industriousness and dedication getting it looking so nice. Hopefully you can get it running that way soon, too!
I DO know about doing the things one isn't supposed to do when rebuilding an engine to keep it on the cheap side.
You'll hear this a lot, but make SURE to mark your rods and their bearing caps as to orientation and number. Front to front, etc. Since I'm prone to leave things for a long time, I usually do different colors of fingernail polish in slightly different spots, so colors and alignment have to match, on the crank or block and the bearing caps alike.
From my perspective, put new rings in it. The thing has worn the cross-hatching off, so the cylinder wall and the ring are smaller than they should be. The rings will have lost tension too; they can't seal as tightly as they ought no
matter what. It will start easier, too.
I'm pulling for you, I really hope you can get this beast back together. I'm envious of your industriousness and dedication getting it looking so nice. Hopefully you can get it running that way soon, too!