Brent,
I’ve removed 8-10 cylinder blocks worth of sleeves.
FWIW:
I take an older propane barbaque grill, and bring both burners up on high setting. I made up
a simple wooden jig. 1x6” oak board, the bottom being the total length of the cylinder block. Then cut two pieces about 4” long. I screwed the 4” blocks near the end vertically at an ID position just longer than the OD distance between the #1 and #4 sleeve flanges. I then place the oak jig in grill on top of a plate of aluminum(to help prevent the oak from catching fire). I place the cylinder block upside down on the jig so that once the block reaches a certain temp, the sleeves start to move a little or drop out on their own. I shut the grill lid and watch the temp rise, playing rounds of frisbee catch with my dog while I wait(she loves that). Once the grill (and block) temp rises to about 450 degree Fahrenheit, things start to get loose. I give it another 25 degrees then open the grill top, and position the end of a 12” length of 2x4 over the first sleeve and lightly tap the sleeve out with a rubber mallet(often it just falls out with little effort unto to oak board(jig. The block starts cooling off fast with the lid open, so sometimes I can get all 4 in one shot if they all come out fast, sometimes I need to close the lid again after 2 sleeves and bring the temp back up to over 450 F and try again. I try to not put more heat into the block than necessary.
I’ve never had an issue removing sleeves this way. Then again, I’ve never seen glued in sleeves either.
My experience has been if the block is hot enough to remove one sleeve, the other sleeves will be loosened up too. So your challenge ....should be ....to remove one without moving the others at all. It might be best to remove all of them. The reset all of them once your sleeve is returned.
George