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dranven said:I talked with a Toyota Master Tech today and he recommended replacing the piston and the ring(s). Does the wall absolutely need to be honed if I'm putting in a new ring? The wall on no. 6 has very minor scoring, but not bad.
Sorry if I missed it, but how did your engine sound before you tore into it, any light knocking when at idle? Did it have good power, any smoke, high oil consumption??
D
If you have to spend the money for a full set of rings you might consider re-ringing all cylinders. Use bead hone to give each cylinder a nice cross-hatch pattern. File-fit rings for each cylinder. This will be the best you could do without a complete rebuild. This will increase compression/performance and reduce smoking/oil consumption.
I must have missed something. I thought you were replacing the rings on all the pistons, but keeping the original pistons. I like this option, and is probably what I would do in your situation.
dranven said:First things first, I hated the factory roof rack. After deliberation about removing it and having the holes welded shut, I read some threads about dropping the headliner, which I didn't want to do, but I didn't really want to use body filler to fill the holes either. I consulted LandCruiserPhil, who gave me a great idea I am happy with.
I pulled off the factory rack (no trouble / no spinning nutserts) and noticed a little bit of rust forming only at the 4 locations where the factory rack is bolted (not the vertical rods that run against the body). I used a dremel with a fine wire wheel in an attempt to knock away the rust. I did pretty well - didn't seem to get it all, but I'm pleased with the result. I sanded, primed, and painted the areas. The rods running vertical along the body left a nasty adhesive, so I got that off with a rubber eraser wheel. Then I polished it up as best I could with by orbital polisher.
Now, keep in mind, I am not a professional, so the job isn't perfect, but it's good enough for me and hey - it's the roof.
I bought some stainless steel button head hex bolts, used some marine grade clear silicone seal on the threads, and screwed them in the holes. They are 5mm x 16mm and the pitch is 0.8.
Here's the result:
Pin_Head said:The piston damage does not look like it was due to ingestion of a foreign object because it is concentrated in two small areas. It looks more like preignition or heat damage from running lean.
EGR was working (no codes) and I didn't have any symptoms of pre ignition. A few others have also given their opinions that it's a foreign object contacting between the valves and the pistons at those two areas. At this point I am gonna start buttoning everything back up.
The deck and all pistons are cleaned. I cleaned up the front timing cover and put it back on.
Question: The oil pump gear spins freely. Is this ok? Shouldn't it spin with the crank? I did a search and one person mentioned it's held by "pressure" when the crank pulley and bolt are on. I'm not sure I understand that, but can anyone else confirm?