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Antique Caterpillar Machinery Owners Club
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D2 5U17608
D2 5U17608
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Posts: 13
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Thank you received: 3
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1 year 8 months ago #246096
by DLittle
I finally had a little spare time to work the D2 and found a few things that are not good. The fuel system is very dirty. the filters and filter housing had a lot of black sludge in them. Someone added a primary screen filter under the seat and it was full of sludge also. I dropped the engine oil and found more metal than I would have liked to have seen. The filter was the same way. The metal looked like aluminum or lead to me and the magnet would not stick to it. I am at a crossroads now. Do I pull the blade off and drop the pan and check the rods and mains or do I just do an in-frame and put new pistons, liners, and bearings in it? I have yet to hear this engine run. Should I change the filter and oil and try to get it running and change it again after a couple hours?? Any advice?
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1 year 8 months ago #246098
by Rome K/G
Hmmm...If it was mine I'd go completely through it and check everything, with the age on these old engines seals get brittle and O-rings leak around liners,etc,etc,etc.
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1 year 8 months ago #246101
by neil
If that material is from the main or rod bearings, that calls suspicion on the journal condition. With not too much effort, you can drop the pan and inspect the journals to decide whether to in-frame it or put the engine on a stand to make life a lot easier since you'll want to give the engine a pretty decent cleaning anyway. Also bear in mind that it's possible the source of the particles could be something else failing (not crank-related) like the gears on the front of the engine or maybe the lifters
Cheers,
Neil
Pittsford, NY
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1 year 8 months ago #246111
by rax200
Hi All,
Dont forget in a D2 the pistons come out the bottom so an in frame rebuild is almost impossible due to the crank in the way.
I would put some new oil and filter and run it for a while keeping in mind to listen for any noises. Also a good idea is to get a long handle screwdriver and place one end on the block and the other end just behind the ear and it is amazing all the sounds you can hear in the block.
Regards
Daryl
1937 RD4 4G4368
1940 D4 7J3717
1942 D4 7J9915SP
1942 R4 6G2550SP
1944 D4 2T6584SP
1945 D4 2T8978SP
1946 D4 5T6271
1956 D4 7U37855
1954 DH226 S/N 89 Howard Tug
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Busso20
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1 year 8 months ago #246120
by trainzkid88
a bit of dowel or broom handle also works as a rough and ready mechanics stethoscope. as long as it stiff it will conduct sound. a proper stethoscope isnt expensive either.
neil he said it wasnt magnetic so i doubt its the timing gears as there all steel are they not? that doesnt mean theres not a bushing somewhere failing.
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1 year 8 months ago #246162
by DLittle
Thank you for the advice guys. I was not aware the pistons came out the bottom. This is about 30 years older than any other Cat I have worked on. Still trying to get my hands on a service manual for it.
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1 year 8 months ago #246169
by CATERPILLARHAVEN
Hi all,
You can pull the pistons out thru the bottom with the crank still in as I've done it with my D2 5U16437 as I changed no 2 and no 3 pistons while the engine was still in the machine but to remove no 3 piston I had to remove the oil pump and they go back in easy enough without using a ring compressor.
Cheers Wayne 👍
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1 year 8 months ago #246180
by bcwayne
Another method I've used is to re-install the pistons through the bottom but without the rings on the pistons... then raise the pistons above the block, install the rings, and then push the pistons into the block with a ring compressor as you would any other engine. Seemed easier than trying to compress the rings with my finger tips when putting them in from the bottom.
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juiceman
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D2 5U17608
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