Well things have gone from bad to worse.
Planned to clean the pickup tube today and seal the engine back up.
This was the pickup once removed.
And this is what I managed to scrape out of it with a small flat bladed screwdriver.
And then something stuck deep inside caught my eye. It took a fair amount of fiddling to get out to.
And that my friends, is a piston oil squirter.
I whipped off the windage tray and quickly realised that this engine has had a recent rebuild. It's squeaky clean in there!
I hoped that maybe the oil squirter had broken off the old engine and got stuck in the pickup and this wasn't seen when the rebuild was done.
I managed to verify 3 of the oil squirters were in tact. But you can't turn the engine over with a wrench, a special tool is needed. So out came the borescope.
And of course, the very last cylinder I checked, cylinder 1.
Unfortunately, this oil squirter looks like it may be a big issue to replace. The engine is fully gear driven, even down to the ancillaries. There is no belt, there is no crank pulley. The harmonic damper is internal.
You can see it here to the right of the rod cap.
And you can see here, how it hinders access to the oil squirter in question.
So what next? Well, the damper is D shaped, so I'm hopeful that once I get the tool to rotate the crank, I can line up the flat side of the harmonic damper with the oil squirter in such a way I can access it. If that doesn't work then it's off to plan B. The harmonic damper itself has two triple square bolts from the bottom and two from the end of the crank and then it slides inwards towards the piston 1 conrod. I just removed the rod cap from piston one and pushed piston one up the bore as far as I could. Unfortunately, even like this the damper won't clear the bottom of the conrod, however if rotated so the flat side is up the top, we may find the clearance required to slide the damper off. If neither of these work, well the engine is going to have to come out.
Obviously I'm hoping I won't have to pull the engine, but if I do then I'll have to build a new shed out front, fully dismantle the engine and rebuild with new gaskets and fastenings checking clearances and general workmanship throughout. I'll probably fully blueprint, document and photograph everything for any future owners.
But lets not think that far ahead yet. I've ordered a timing kit which includes the part required to rotate the engine. Lets see how I get on with that first.
Maybe at 32 it's time to start drinking?