Iggy913
New member
- 81
- 1
- 0
- Location
- Virginia Beach, VA
Ladies and Gentlemen,
My 923A2 has been suffering from an oil/coolant mixing issue recently and I wanted to share the results of what I've found and provide some info to hopefully help others.
Over the past month I've noticed my engine oil becoming an increasingly milky mix of oil/water. Initially the water would "boil out" or evaporate after running the truck down the road getting it good and warm, however as time progressed the "milk" got thicker to the point where I had to do some investigating.
You can get a coolant pressure testing kit which will allow you to do just that and pressurize your cooling system and begin to search for leaks. Before I bought/rented that I pulled the oil pan to begin looking around. I quickly noticed coolant running down the cylinder liners of #1 and #2 cylinders. That's a pretty tell tale sign of a damaged liner or liner o-ring. In either case the only repair option is to take the motor down to a bare block to get to those parts.
Over the last few weeks I've dedicated a few hours each day to the teardown process. I was a certified diesel tech at one time so I wasn't going at it blindly. Before anyone else attempts an "in chassis" rebuild let me make you aware of a few issues your likely to find.
First some good, these motors are commercially available Cummins 6CTA8.3's and there is nothing "military" about them so please don't be scared thinking you have to find "government issued" parts from years past. There is a serial number located on the fuel pump housing and if you give that to any reputable diesel parts supplier they can set you up with everything you need. I ordered all my parts from "Cummins Parts Direct" pricing was the best I found, customer service was great, and the parts aren't made in China. I ended up with a complete overhaul kit, including cylinder liners, rod bearings, all gaskets and seals, thermostat, oil cooler, and various other hoses and fittings, all were spot on perfect replacements.
Now the bad: you will have to pull the injectors to remove the cylinder head, they will be stuck due to age/corrosion. Don't be fooled into thinking you can twist or pull them out by hand or some wrenches. I ended up dropping a piece of chain over the head of the injector, threading on a nut, and attaching the other end of chain to a 25lb dumbell and used it like a massive slide hammer, still wore me out completely by the time all 6 were out. Do send your injectors out for rebuild after this, due to this corrosion and unknown age we had all ours serviced just in case.
Next the exhaust manifold, you will break some of the bolts holding it to the head unless your some kind of magician. Don't fool with EZ outs or extractors, I tried and nearly broke some of them too, just take the head to a machine shop and have the broken bolts removed, its a good chance to also have the head pressure checked for leaks, and decked for flatness.
At this point you'll be ready to remove the liners themselves, here again don't be fooled by back yard mechanics saying you can drive them out with a hammer/punch or chunck of wood and a floor jack. I bought a puller off ebay for cheap that the seller made perfect to measurements I took on the motor and gave him. The liners were all out in 10 minutes with the puller and no damage done.
Before reassembly I meticulously cleaned and lubed everything making for a very plesant process. Just take your time, use the right tools, and this massive job is actually pretty easy compared to some automotive tasks.
Sorry for the length but I thought it would be helpful to some, if anyone needs more help feel free to PM or email me.
Mike
My 923A2 has been suffering from an oil/coolant mixing issue recently and I wanted to share the results of what I've found and provide some info to hopefully help others.
Over the past month I've noticed my engine oil becoming an increasingly milky mix of oil/water. Initially the water would "boil out" or evaporate after running the truck down the road getting it good and warm, however as time progressed the "milk" got thicker to the point where I had to do some investigating.
You can get a coolant pressure testing kit which will allow you to do just that and pressurize your cooling system and begin to search for leaks. Before I bought/rented that I pulled the oil pan to begin looking around. I quickly noticed coolant running down the cylinder liners of #1 and #2 cylinders. That's a pretty tell tale sign of a damaged liner or liner o-ring. In either case the only repair option is to take the motor down to a bare block to get to those parts.
Over the last few weeks I've dedicated a few hours each day to the teardown process. I was a certified diesel tech at one time so I wasn't going at it blindly. Before anyone else attempts an "in chassis" rebuild let me make you aware of a few issues your likely to find.
First some good, these motors are commercially available Cummins 6CTA8.3's and there is nothing "military" about them so please don't be scared thinking you have to find "government issued" parts from years past. There is a serial number located on the fuel pump housing and if you give that to any reputable diesel parts supplier they can set you up with everything you need. I ordered all my parts from "Cummins Parts Direct" pricing was the best I found, customer service was great, and the parts aren't made in China. I ended up with a complete overhaul kit, including cylinder liners, rod bearings, all gaskets and seals, thermostat, oil cooler, and various other hoses and fittings, all were spot on perfect replacements.
Now the bad: you will have to pull the injectors to remove the cylinder head, they will be stuck due to age/corrosion. Don't be fooled into thinking you can twist or pull them out by hand or some wrenches. I ended up dropping a piece of chain over the head of the injector, threading on a nut, and attaching the other end of chain to a 25lb dumbell and used it like a massive slide hammer, still wore me out completely by the time all 6 were out. Do send your injectors out for rebuild after this, due to this corrosion and unknown age we had all ours serviced just in case.
Next the exhaust manifold, you will break some of the bolts holding it to the head unless your some kind of magician. Don't fool with EZ outs or extractors, I tried and nearly broke some of them too, just take the head to a machine shop and have the broken bolts removed, its a good chance to also have the head pressure checked for leaks, and decked for flatness.
At this point you'll be ready to remove the liners themselves, here again don't be fooled by back yard mechanics saying you can drive them out with a hammer/punch or chunck of wood and a floor jack. I bought a puller off ebay for cheap that the seller made perfect to measurements I took on the motor and gave him. The liners were all out in 10 minutes with the puller and no damage done.
Before reassembly I meticulously cleaned and lubed everything making for a very plesant process. Just take your time, use the right tools, and this massive job is actually pretty easy compared to some automotive tasks.
Sorry for the length but I thought it would be helpful to some, if anyone needs more help feel free to PM or email me.
Mike