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Emergency Oil Pan Repair Needed
I have an '88 Grady White with a 4.3L OMC Cobra (I believe
this is a Chevy Engine- 6 cyl.) The pan has developed a leak
right on time for the holidays and I have no chance of getting
it replaced now.
The hole area appears to be at the end of the engine facing
aft and is accessable. I am tempted to drain all the oil out, sand
the area well and try a fiberglass patch. Any chance this will
work?
Or how about JB weld?
Thanks. Frank. |
frank1492
Jun 30
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| If it's a pinhole, put a screw in it.
"frank1492" <frank1492@verizon.net> wrote in message |
Jim
Jun 30
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| The screw sounds easy!!! Use a rubber washer as well.
If is it larger, I have had luck with Marinetex. The key is CLEAN
oiless sanded work space... Cover with marinetex about 4 times the size
of the patch area... cover with fiberglass mat, cover with more
marinetex. JB weld can also work. Again.. patch it once with the
chemical, cover with with glass matt and recover with more chemical. |
Ed
Jun 30
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| It is a pinhole opening I am sure but the surrounding metal is shot
over a space the size of a quarter or larger. I had thought of using a
screw with a rubber washer, but since the surrounding metal is in such
poor condition, I was afraid the screw might pop out sending a stream
of hot oil with it until I lost all 5 quarts in the bilge!
I think I will go with the JB weld/ Marinetex idea plus
fiberglass as Ed suggested. Or maybe a screw first? Or screws later to
secure the patch (all in sound metal.) Or a brace against the pan over
the patch.
Thanks all. I think I know what to try. Will let you know.
Frank On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 20:34:18 -0400, Ed <ed@nospam.com> wrote: |
frank1492
Jul 1
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| Ed-
Do you mean just to use the fiberglass mat without fiberglass
resin, and to use the JB Weld in place of the resin????
Frank On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 20:34:18 -0400, Ed <ed@nospam.com> wrote: |
frank1492
Jul 1
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| I had no time to wait for the JB Weld to cure. My solution was a
combined approach- sheet metal screw with rubber washer, then
a sploch of Bondo over the rotted area, then 4X6 fiberglass cloth
with resin. So far so good.
Thanks all for your advice!
Frank
On Sun, 01 Jul 2007 02:51:11 GMT, frank1492 <frank1492@verizon.net>
wrote: |
frank1492
Jul 2
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