Your hourly rate is way too low IMO.
119K mi 08 Chevy Suburban 5.3 L P0300
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AFM Disabler ?
2008 Chevy Suburban 5.3 AFM Engine.Parts are ordered . Decisions decisions. Anyone know if a Plug in the OBD connector AFM Disabler is something worth considering to reduce future oil consumption ,prevent a repeat AFM lifter failure , and extend the engine life ?, Or just something months later if the Disabler gets inadvertently unplugged and the AFM then works and goes to Disable cylinder bleed down collapsed mode they might hang up in a collapsed position because AFM lifter was not being exercised regularly, could varnish up inside and then stick when finally used, or on the other hand , since oil be constantly flowing through a new unused AFM lifter the chance of sticking be way less than the common failure part being used on a daily basis . LMAO The reviews of the product sound promising with no change noticed in fuel economy with reduced oil consumption, but how do you know these aren't posted by insider Shills. Horrible failure stories are more believable in IMHO.Last edited by Witsend; 04-18-2017, 10:13 AM.Comment
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I went into this job thinking I was just going to take the heads off and do the lifters , but i got all the stem seals with the headset, and figured, why not clean the stuff up, lap the seats and install the seals, but I didn't like the appearance of the exhaust valve faces, so ordered up 8 exhaust valves and new ac tensioner and belt . I already pulled short block Resealing the short block , Oil pan gasket, rear main seal and a new pickup tube o ring, but seems the main caps side bolts weep some oil from the side of block and when I get the conversion set ,hope it has new seal washers for those side bolts, I'm hoping those don't require replacement because they might be torque to yield. I'm trying to resist my inner Demons telling me to pull the waterpump and do the timing chain and oil pump. Just getting carried away I guess.Comment
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Seems cheaper and probably last longer to just get all new ones for $7-$12 ea than to bother with a valve job.Comment
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Exhaust valves get a lot of heat on the stems. Replacing the exhaust valves isn't a bad idea.
Intake valves are a different story though. They don't get the same heat and drop the valve head like exhaust valves can. After refacing the intake valves, if they're too "sharp", THEN replace them.
Regardless, new valves and NOT cleaning up the valve seats is kinda like taking a shower and putting dirty socks back on. Same as refacing the valves and not trimming up the seats.....only half a job. New valves or refaced intake valves......
Even the position of the valve/seat mating lines is important once you're in that far. Just lapping them in may not get the position of the seal in the optimum position. (nevermind three angle valve jobs that all the hot-rodders used to brag about. Sometimes we would cut 5 angles to get things just right-!!) (taught by OLD SCHOOL machinists before the apprenticeship started back in the day....)
Why not take the heads to a machine shop and let them do the heads completely and properly-?? Sometimes heads can be machined and only take 3 to 7 thou off if the machine shop knows what they're doing. The head gaskets will thank you.Comment
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As much as I don't like to agree with Crusty,I've yet to see any reason to replace any valves in these engines,even those with 400,000 km on them.
New aftermarket valves won't last near as long as a properly ground set of factory ones.
I grind my own,always have.Lapping destroys the interference angle and shortens the life of your valve job.Comment
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I feel this may be an a lot of hours and money spent just to be on the hook for the warranty when it's all over. I won't say that a reman unit would be better than the work you have performed but it would have been gone a long time ago with minimal worry.Comment
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I feel this may be an a lot of hours and money spent just to be on the hook for the warranty when it's all over. I won't say that a reman unit would be better than the work you have performed but it would have been gone a long time ago with minimal worry.
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Thought it was pretty interesting that when the AFM solenoids are Not energized , oil doesn't flow to the AFM lifters as far as I could tell.Last edited by Witsend; 04-25-2017, 07:33 PM.Comment
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As much as I don't like to agree with Crusty,I've yet to see any reason to replace any valves in these engines,even those with 400,000 km on them.
New aftermarket valves won't last near as long as a properly ground set of factory ones.
I grind my own,always have.Lapping destroys the interference angle and shortens the life of your valve job.
As for aftermarket valves, there are some that are quite acceptable, others not quite so acceptable.
Sure, re-use the original valves and face them yourself, but, even factory valves have a limit and can be faced and still have too thin a "lip" which will "tulip" up so replacement may be appropriate. It depends on how much metal is remaining after re-facing.
The valve stems can also become worn and before we wasted time re-facing any intake valves, they were inspected. Anything more than one or two thou were tossed aside.
As for the EXHAUST valves, my mentors taught us that the stems could have taken too much heat and weakened the metal at the thinnest point (just where the valve head tapers down to the stem) and re-facing the intakes (where enough metal remains) and replacing the exhaust valves (with quality components) resulted in fewer problems.
Oh, you're absolutely correct about the lapping. We would lap every valve in place simply enough (VERY little) to get the witness line showing exactly where, and how wide, the contact between the face and the seat was.Comment
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Thought I recall back in the Nineties , Ford training class telling us that valve and seat refacing should no longer be done in Stone Age Fashion with grinding stones, and specified using equipment that cuts the valves and seats. Absolutely no more Knurling of Valve guides.
I also seem to remember the expensive on car brake lathes that they wanted the brake rotors machined with , and the expensive Road Force Wheel Balancers. These ingenious ideas worked to save on new car warranty expenses, changing rotors hubs , bearings, tires and wheels that weren't manufactured perfectly true.Not popular with flat rate techs , for saving time and making money thoughComment
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Thought I recall back in the Nineties , Ford training class telling us that valve and seat refacing should no longer be done in Stone Age Fashion with grinding stones, and specified using equipment that cuts the valves and seats. Absolutely no more Knurling of Valve guides.
I also seem to remember the expensive on car brake lathes that they wanted the brake rotors machined with , and the expensive Road Force Wheel Balancers. These ingenious ideas worked to save on new car warranty expenses, changing rotors hubs , bearings, tires and wheels that weren't manufactured perfectly true.Not popular with flat rate techs , for saving time and making money though
On-Car brake lathes simply MASKED the ROOT CAUSE of the brake vibrations, but you're correct....it was an attempt to save the manufacturer warranty money for sub-quality OE components. Had one recently where the customer and I both knew the hub had a bit of an issue, and we decided to have the dealer trim the rotor to true on-the-car. Later, when the bearing eventually needed to be replaced, THEN we also replaced the hub with the bearing.
Road force balancing has its place, but it's usually only necessary when the tire name-brand isn't one of the top-shelf brands. Good tires don't need the fudging....Comment
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Transmission dipstick tube, any trick to install it?
From messing with the dipstick tube bracket, bending bracket away from the bell housing stud bolt in order to remove bell housing bolt the dipstick tube seal showed leakage, so after the engine was out I decided to change the cooler lines, trans front seal and a new trans dipstick tube seal. Not wanting anything in my way torquing down the heads , I left the trans dipstick tube removed, but now I can't figure out how to get the trans dipstick tube installed because the head , rear heat tube, AC accumulator are in the way. There has got to be a trick to get the turd in without beating the living f@ck out of the dipstick tube in order to get it to get past , but it will likely crack it or slice the seal grommet. GM had a recall on the trans dipstick tubes, so what did all the Bushers do to get them in and out? Unbolt the trans mount and Jack up the transfer case and back of trans I wish I had installed the trans dipstick tube before installing and torquing down the right cylinder headComment
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