G
Guest
Guest
I know what I should do in this case...
I have a sticky lifter. No big deal, only for the first minute or 2, it drops a cylinder a bit, probably a stuck open valve from the lifter. After a minute of driving, more of a tick, then after a few minutes its completely gone. I just changed the oil recently, and I may have loosened up some sludge. It probably got into the lifter (some of it), and made it stick at startup.
No no no, definitely not a piston slap or rod knock, I know the difference. Its a high pitched "ticking" noise, and it goes away when the lifter galley fills with oil. I put in Kedall One straight 50 for summer (a penny a quart at AutoZone, I bought a case and did both cars!) and a cheaper filter, which is fine (theyre usually manufactured by a bigger company, like Fram, for instance).
I think, rather than water my new oil down with Rislone now, Ill just deal with the tick till it gets cool out or I hit 2,000 miles on the oil and put the Rislone in, probably a half quart. Its always done wonders for a sticky or ticky lifter for me.
No, I did not fill the filter with oil first, which probably caused it. The issue with that is, for a split second, pressure from the oil pump causes air to shoot through the dingy galleys (instead of oil, since no oil in the filter), loosening debris that this motor probablty has enough of. Some of it probably got into the lifter oil galleys and boom, lifter stick/tick. That info is from my father, whos worked on cars for 50 years, and some here may know what he races now.
Always fill your filter! Especially on older internally dingy engines.
Any other suggestions?
I have a sticky lifter. No big deal, only for the first minute or 2, it drops a cylinder a bit, probably a stuck open valve from the lifter. After a minute of driving, more of a tick, then after a few minutes its completely gone. I just changed the oil recently, and I may have loosened up some sludge. It probably got into the lifter (some of it), and made it stick at startup.
No no no, definitely not a piston slap or rod knock, I know the difference. Its a high pitched "ticking" noise, and it goes away when the lifter galley fills with oil. I put in Kedall One straight 50 for summer (a penny a quart at AutoZone, I bought a case and did both cars!) and a cheaper filter, which is fine (theyre usually manufactured by a bigger company, like Fram, for instance).
I think, rather than water my new oil down with Rislone now, Ill just deal with the tick till it gets cool out or I hit 2,000 miles on the oil and put the Rislone in, probably a half quart. Its always done wonders for a sticky or ticky lifter for me.
No, I did not fill the filter with oil first, which probably caused it. The issue with that is, for a split second, pressure from the oil pump causes air to shoot through the dingy galleys (instead of oil, since no oil in the filter), loosening debris that this motor probablty has enough of. Some of it probably got into the lifter oil galleys and boom, lifter stick/tick. That info is from my father, whos worked on cars for 50 years, and some here may know what he races now.
Always fill your filter! Especially on older internally dingy engines.
Any other suggestions?