• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

 

Failed valve retainers and bent valve

Squizzbiscuit

New member
5
14
3
Location
Western NY
Hello all, first post to the site. I've been very impressed with the knowledge and willingness to share. I finely bought my first MV and could use some advice.

I bought a 65 M35a2, with a Hercules LDT-465 (I think). Previous owner had it for almost 20yrs. Last year, he fired it up and it over-revved. He dumped the clutch in 5th to kill it and let it sit till I bought it. Problem was a gummed up hydraulic head and I was able to get it cleaned up. It ran rough upon restarting and I had hoped it was just crap fuel/sticky injector. I took it for a short drive to see if it would clear up (hindsight, not my best decision). My trip ended with an audible rattle. I pushed in the clutch and there she died.

I pulled the valve covers and i found most of the valve retainer clips pushed almost all the way thru the top spring retainers. The rattle (i assume) came from the one retainer that completely failed and was spit out from under the rocker. The failing retainers I figure were hammered by the over-rev. Anyone ever see this?

So now I have one bent push rod, a bent valve (locked tight in the head), damaged rocker (does not move freely on the shaft), and a whole bunch more retainers with their clips punched almost thru, just waiting to wreck some stuff.

My next move is to pull the head to check piston condition. But I'd like to hear your opinions on my options.

- if piston is OK, I swap the head, replace failed retainers and clips. Say some encouraging words to the rotating assembly and run it. If piston is hammered, skip to option two.

- cut my losses and put my money into a replacement engine. (Eventually rebuilding the existing engine for backup.)

Thanks in advance, I have photos if it helps.
 

cbrTodd

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
259
465
63
Location
Indianapolis, Indiana
Hello all, first post to the site. I've been very impressed with the knowledge and willingness to share. I finely bought my first MV and could use some advice.

I bought a 65 M35a2, with a Hercules LDT-465 (I think). Previous owner had it for almost 20yrs. Last year, he fired it up and it over-revved. He dumped the clutch in 5th to kill it and let it sit till I bought it. Problem was a gummed up hydraulic head and I was able to get it cleaned up. It ran rough upon restarting and I had hoped it was just crap fuel/sticky injector. I took it for a short drive to see if it would clear up (hindsight, not my best decision). My trip ended with an audible rattle. I pushed in the clutch and there she died.

I pulled the valve covers and i found most of the valve retainer clips pushed almost all the way thru the top spring retainers. The rattle (i assume) came from the one retainer that completely failed and was spit out from under the rocker. The failing retainers I figure were hammered by the over-rev. Anyone ever see this?

So now I have one bent push rod, a bent valve (locked tight in the head), damaged rocker (does not move freely on the shaft), and a whole bunch more retainers with their clips punched almost thru, just waiting to wreck some stuff.

My next move is to pull the head to check piston condition. But I'd like to hear your opinions on my options.

- if piston is OK, I swap the head, replace failed retainers and clips. Say some encouraging words to the rotating assembly and run it. If piston is hammered, skip to option two.

- cut my losses and put my money into a replacement engine. (Eventually rebuilding the existing engine for backup.)

Thanks in advance, I have photos if it helps.
Any valve that has touched a piston will likely fail eventually. If they get the slightest bend, each time they open and close it puts them through a loading cycle and they fail in fatigue where the stem blends into the head.

I would recommend replacing all the valve collets and retainers (plus any valves that have touched a piston as mentioned above) and verifying that none of the valves are excessively tight or loose in the guides. If there is no significant piston damage, roll all the pushrods on a piece of glass to make sure they are straight and reassemble and give it a shot.
 

ToddJK

Well-known member
1,312
4,464
113
Location
Sparta, MI
CBR is right. Definitely gonna be some work to be done to get it correct. Hopefully you can find all the parts or a donor engine. I wonder if the bearings on the crank are good, would suck to do all that work to have a bad bearing show up next.
 

rustystud

Well-known member
9,071
2,388
113
Location
Woodinville, Washington
Yeah I've seen this happen a few times. The problem is there is so much that can be damaged by an over-rev'ed engine. Like "ToddJK" mentioned you can have damage to the crank bearings, but more importantly your piston rods can be bent. Seen one engine that bent all six rods just "slightly" . Didn't find this out until the engine was going back together. By that time with new bearings, new rods, new pistons and rings, new valves and springs and retainers, rebuilt heads with new valve inserts you could have bought a couple of good donor engines and still have money left over for a good steak dinner and a trip to Disney Land !
Any engine that has had a "over-rev" failure is a suspect engine for the rest of it's life. Until you totally rebuild it you will never know.
 

Squizzbiscuit

New member
5
14
3
Location
Western NY
I'm sensing a strong tone of engine replacement. I enjoy wrenching on things, but repeated engine failures will take the fun out of that in a hurry. Thanks again guys, your input is appreciated.

..... Anyone got a motor near Buffalo NY? Lol
 

davidb56

Well-known member
1,020
1,237
113
Location
Bonners Ferry Idaho
I'm sensing a strong tone of engine replacement. I enjoy wrenching on things, but repeated engine failures will take the fun out of that in a hurry. Thanks again guys, your input is appreciated.

..... Anyone got a motor near Buffalo NY? Lol
Boyce Equipment in Utah has them and is a top notch company to deal with.
 

MarkM

CODE BROWN...It's all going to sh~t !
Steel Soldiers Supporter
1,031
1,829
113
Location
WOBURN. MA.
You can pull the head but as many of us here think it won't be pretty. I would pull the head for the hell if it but start searching for a replacement engine. It happens.

Mark
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks