I just went out with a flashlight , and can see inside the oil pump , and it has oil inside , which is then gathering on the outside edge of the opening , causing a drip . I am doing the white paper towel test to check it over the next few hours . I just think that when I filled the pump with oil , I used too much, and that's what I'm seeing. Really don't want to pull the powerhead off if I don't have to
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
access to oil pan
Collapse
X
-
I left out a key bit of information. I had a friend helping me with reinstalling the powerhead last night. In my excitement to get it reinstalled , I forgot to install the shift rod , so we had to raise it off the center section , and at that time noticed there was oil on the upper mounting bolt cover. I really didn't think much of it since there was no oil in the engine , I assumed it was from filling the pump
Comment
-
did that all afternoon , driveshaft isn't extending far enough into the oil pump to engage the splines in the crank . As an example , lets say the diameter of the tube is 1" , and the opening of the pump is 3/4" . I should be able to see 1/8" of the oil pump body all around the driveshaft tube. What I have is almost nothing at the "top" of the diameter of the tube , and about 3/16" at the bottom . I don't see how this is physically possible due to the way everything bolts together. The powerhead is flat on its mounting , as is everything else , all mounting bolts torqued to specs
Comment
-
Is it possible the NEW oil pump splines are smaller or different than the original pump?
If the mid section wasn't bolted up to the powerhead, I'd say try sticking the LU drive shaft directly into the oil pump... See if it goes in....Scott
1997 Angler 204, Center Console powered by a 2006 Yamaha F150TXR
Comment
Comment