greaseball
New member
I actually cracked it a while ago. I bought a 62 f100 with 12k on the rebuilt motor. I changed the oil, plugs, topped off the radiator, new smithy's glass pack, white walls, and proceeded to enjoy my new daily driver for a whopping 2 weeks before cracking the head while going up our local monster 3 mile grade. I was able to limp my truck home on 5 cylinders. Actually, I more than limped it, it would only run at high rpms so I obliged and was passing people left and right on 5 cylinders. Heck, it's one more than most imports have.
I got home and watched it run (it still idled on 5). There was steam coming from a crack on the head between the deck and the spark plug hole on one of the middle cylinders. It never overheated out of the radiator, and the stock temp guage read cool. Never lost oil pressure but the oil was VERY thin, and looked like it was boiling out of the side cover. Radiator was still full of nice looking green coolant.
I pulled the thermostat and it was facing the right direction. I put it in a pot of boiling water and it opened.
When I first got it, I noticed a bad exhaust leak at the flange and meant to get a new gasket but failed to find one locally. Turns out that it wasn't the gasket that was leaking but a huge crack just above the flange on the exhaust manifold facing the block. Could this be why my head cracked???????
After getting the head off, the spark plug on the cracked cylinder showed typical signs of predetination (probably from racing Hondas home on 5 cylinders). Head gasket looked ok, and the engine did look very fresh with cross hatching still visible on the cyl. walls and no ridge. The old owner kept meticulous records from 1964 until 2000 when he died. He documented the exact mile that the 223 was rebuilt. It's bored .030 over.
I bought a core head and had it rebuilt by John Mummert. I need to finish my fence so I can start rebuilding this thing.
Any tips, suggestions on why my head cracked, etc. is more than welcome. I plan on making this my daily driver so I'm going to have to make friends with that big nasty grade. Heck, it's an old torquey truck right? I don't care how long it takes to get up that grade, just as long as I don't break doing it.
Thanks,
Shane
I got home and watched it run (it still idled on 5). There was steam coming from a crack on the head between the deck and the spark plug hole on one of the middle cylinders. It never overheated out of the radiator, and the stock temp guage read cool. Never lost oil pressure but the oil was VERY thin, and looked like it was boiling out of the side cover. Radiator was still full of nice looking green coolant.
I pulled the thermostat and it was facing the right direction. I put it in a pot of boiling water and it opened.
When I first got it, I noticed a bad exhaust leak at the flange and meant to get a new gasket but failed to find one locally. Turns out that it wasn't the gasket that was leaking but a huge crack just above the flange on the exhaust manifold facing the block. Could this be why my head cracked???????
After getting the head off, the spark plug on the cracked cylinder showed typical signs of predetination (probably from racing Hondas home on 5 cylinders). Head gasket looked ok, and the engine did look very fresh with cross hatching still visible on the cyl. walls and no ridge. The old owner kept meticulous records from 1964 until 2000 when he died. He documented the exact mile that the 223 was rebuilt. It's bored .030 over.
I bought a core head and had it rebuilt by John Mummert. I need to finish my fence so I can start rebuilding this thing.
Any tips, suggestions on why my head cracked, etc. is more than welcome. I plan on making this my daily driver so I'm going to have to make friends with that big nasty grade. Heck, it's an old torquey truck right? I don't care how long it takes to get up that grade, just as long as I don't break doing it.
Thanks,
Shane