So I'm working out the bugs on the red 1960 and hook up a mechanical oil pressure gauge and am impressed by 100 plus psi readings when cold. When warm, idle is about 40 and goes up to 100 or so when reved a little...odd. This gauge has seen service on other rigs and is my high tech diagnostic tool and mostly hangs on a wall
1. I changed the oil and rebuilt the filter, made sure all the little parts are inside. Not that it should effect oil pressure, it just needed done.
2. Removed oil pressure relief valve and cleaned up the insides, plunger moves freely now. Bolted on with hose to the rear, adjusting nut/bolt just about all the way out. Oil psi still too high, try a different relief valve, still too high.
3. Remove valve cover to check oil flow through rockers. All is well, nice flow. Replace a bent push rod and adjust valves while I'm in there
4. Compress an extra relief valve spring in a vise to weaken/shorten it, no help.
5. Remove spring all together, pressure still too high.
6. Remove plunger, pressure remains around 40 at idle...I'm guessing at this point in a normal engine most oil would be going back into the sump and there should be little to no pressure.
7. Remove the adjusting nut/bolt while running, good flow all over the floor and pressure drops to, well, nothing of course.
Any ideas before I open this can o worms further? The only thing I can come up with is the passage between the oil relief valve and the sump has been blocked by a Prior Owner or Rebuilder, or maybe the oil pump is feeding into (the wrong) one of two identical threaded holes that feed the oil pressure relief valve.
It has been a long night...good morning
1. I changed the oil and rebuilt the filter, made sure all the little parts are inside. Not that it should effect oil pressure, it just needed done.
2. Removed oil pressure relief valve and cleaned up the insides, plunger moves freely now. Bolted on with hose to the rear, adjusting nut/bolt just about all the way out. Oil psi still too high, try a different relief valve, still too high.
3. Remove valve cover to check oil flow through rockers. All is well, nice flow. Replace a bent push rod and adjust valves while I'm in there
4. Compress an extra relief valve spring in a vise to weaken/shorten it, no help.
5. Remove spring all together, pressure still too high.
6. Remove plunger, pressure remains around 40 at idle...I'm guessing at this point in a normal engine most oil would be going back into the sump and there should be little to no pressure.
7. Remove the adjusting nut/bolt while running, good flow all over the floor and pressure drops to, well, nothing of course.
Any ideas before I open this can o worms further? The only thing I can come up with is the passage between the oil relief valve and the sump has been blocked by a Prior Owner or Rebuilder, or maybe the oil pump is feeding into (the wrong) one of two identical threaded holes that feed the oil pressure relief valve.
It has been a long night...good morning
