Typical aussi car is a Holden, right?
Holden HSV GTS-R W1 soon in the mirrors of Terry's Arias Kawasaki eating the dust
Thanks Per, I've always been a Ford fan, I own one of the last Ford's built in Oz and had several V8 Fords back in the day, but technology has moved on, I had a street light drag with a Mach III Mustang with my 2.7 litre V6 Turbo Diesel last year, and left him in my black exhaust smoke. The Mach III was one of my favourite Mustang's back in the day, but modern technology has surpassed good old American grunt, my diesel SUV will blow "Musclecars" of the era off the road, and still return close to 40 MPG fuel economy. Oh well, they were fun, "Back in the day"........
Motorcycle technology is much the same I suppose, my 1997 VFR750 (an "Old" bike now) produced 103 BHP and has a top speed of around 250 KPH, performance we could only dream about when our old 750's first came out with 67 BHP and maybe 200 KPH, on a good day. But that shouldn't stop us having fun with old bikes, should it?
As expected, I didn't get the engine back into the frame today. One of my big musclebound sons was at work, and the other was busy working on his car, so I continued doing little things on the big Kawasaki engine before installation. I tipped it (carefully) on it's back, so I could install the oil pump and sump pan.
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 1 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 3 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
The sump pan I installed may have been off the black engine, or one I bought from "Oink", but I'd cleaned them both in the ultrasonic cleaner, so it was as clean as a whistle. I found the new gasket and then spent the next hour or so looking for some bolts to install it. The PO of the black engine had used a combination of rusty unbrako's and hardware store metric screws, but as I have the world's largest collection of Kawasaki engine bolts after some Ebay credit card melting, using the OEM parts manual, I did a search for the 13 6mm x 25mm, 3 6mm x 35mm and 1 6mm x 50mm bolt, then cleaned them up on my wire wheel, and degreased them, then sprayed them with WD40, and installed the sump pan.
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 4 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
I tipped it back the other way, and decided to install new exhaust gaskets while the engine was out of the frame, as it's easier.
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 5 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
I used some Wurth special exhaust silicon sealant, it does a great job, and unlike other silicons, doesn't stink when it gets hot. it's "Wurth" it's weight in gold, ha ha!
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 6 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 7 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
All good. OK, next job, I have oil cooler adapters on the engine, several coolers in my garage, but no cooler hose. Bugger. OK, I found a short length and looped it between the adapters, and clamped it into place. I'll leave it like that until I've fired it up for the first time, and if it's running well, will install the cooler before I go for a decent ride.
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 9a by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
And that was about it, it was hot (yes, hot weather, woohoo, where has this weird year gone?) and I was thirsty, so I opened a bottle of Ginger Rocket, and packed up for the day. Engine not in yet, but I'm running out of excuses, so I better get it done, I have lots more projects, and who knows how much time? More soon.
1428 Sun 4 Oct 2020 9b by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr