Today has been generally bad news on Paddy. I reminded myself, however, that I shouldn't be in a funk. If my problems today are my biggest issues, life doesn't suck.
I started out by taking the cases to my media blaster. I spoke with him yesterday, explained I have a pretty good feel for all the oil channels now, and asked if I could tape up the motor this time. He said, "Sure!"
This morning they set me up on a 55-gallon drum with tape, putty (for oil passages), and a rag with Xylol to clean any oil residue prior to taping.
You may notice my head and cylinder at the bottom of the pic at the far left. They were ready for me to take home.
I taped up the bosses for the main bearings:
Stuffed some putty where the o-rings go on the 2 & 3 cylinder studs then taped them up:
And finished by puttying and taping the other various oil orifices.
Then, it was time to take the head and cylinder home for cleaning. I saw the guy helping me shaking the head, and it was snowing plastic media. He looked concerned. Although I expected some media, I couldn't figure out why all that would be coming out given they'd taped it up.
I asked him if we could take the tape off there and blow it out with an air gun. He obliged by taking me over to an employee using an air gun to blow the trunk out of a recently blasted Cutlass. Here's what the "taped" head yielded when uncovered.
Media EVERYWHERE! The air gun did a decent job, but I was pissed when I untaped the bottom of the head and found these:
Two deep razor-blade gashes to my gasket surface.
I showed it to Air Gun Guy, and he didn't have much comment. More on that later. Air Gun Guy told me his dad chem dips all his stuff when rebuilding motors, since the media often plugs oil channels. He recommended I go two doors down to Blue Oval Performance, a full machine shop that could clean it up.
On my way out, I showed the main guy the razor blade slits, and you could see the color leave his face. He explained he farmed the tape job out to the "new guy" (a.k.a. Air Gun Guy) and should have watched him closer. I guess that's why Air Gun Guy didn't have much to say earlier - he knew he'd f'd up.
Frustrated, I walked a couple doors down to Blue Oval Performance - a cool machine shop specializing in Ford Shelbys, Mustangs and Cobras. Never even knew it was there. The owner Rob was very helpful. He immediately noticed my #4 exhaust valve is BENT!
The white stuff around the edge of the valve is daylight seeping through.
He also said the shop that decked my head during rebuild #1 dragged metal across the head during the process, as evidenced by the semi-circle marks that appear three times across the head:
In the above pic you can also see media stuck in the bent valve. Why? Because the media fits in the opening.
I decided Rob was my guy. I wasn't going to drive the 40 minutes north to the shop that did my cylinder and head work. I was ticked about the poor deck job, and Rob seemed to know his stuff. He said middle of next week I'll know if I need to order any more valves and he'll have some initial feedback for me. I told him I'd drop off my pistons for him to ensure they still fit OK in the cylinder sleeves. I also want him to see if my #4 piston is OK given the bent valve.
I'm in a holding pattern until next week. That'll give me time to find and order parts; take the oil pump apart to see if it's hiding any metal shavings or plastic media; clean out the oil lines; and take a closer look at the motor's crank, primary and counter shafts, transmission, clutch and kickstarter.
Here's to hoping you're reading this after a nice spin on your bike today - sure wish I was able to!