sam dupont
Well-Known Member
No scientific proof, but I have always believed fresh engines will seize from setting sooner than worn engines. Clean metal resting on clean metal.
Not mine, and it’s already out of the car.****, rough crowd tonight.
Simple solution R413, yank it out and go through it yourself or hire a pro.
There is no simple website forum fix for this which is what I think you're looking for.
Seems to me you need option 2.
flex plate is off.Is the motor on a stand, is the flexplate still attached, could be bent allowing it to seize
It's true!!! I've seen it first hand, marine engines (stern drives) that ingested water, sat for days or longer with water on top of the pistons (hydro-locked). I've fixed dozens of these by getting the water out and getting them running and up to temp, 2-3 oil changes...BUT THE ONLY ONE I COULDN'T SAVE WAS A FRESH REBUILD!!! Obviously new metal can not tolerate the corrosion because there isn't enough oil "pounded" into the iron.No scientific proof, but I have always believed fresh engines will seize from setting sooner than worn engines. Clean metal resting on clean metal.
Absolutely! Seen that too.Could mouse have built a nest in the engine and when you turn it over the piston hits the nest?
dont understand,it is the original engineIt is true that original Mopar engines are pretty bulletproof, I've had a 318 and a 400 that sat for 20+ years outside, the 318 fired up without doing anything to it, even ran on the early 2000s avgas we left in the tank without doing anything to the carb and the 400 fired up after filling the cylinders with mineral oil and putting a new carb on. But alas, you don't have an original engine, it's likely been butchered. Why exactly was it only driven 20 miles? Don't trust some unknown engine builder to get all the clearances and specs right, the only way you know for sure an engine is built right is if it's been driven.