AH64ID
TDR MEMBER
On my way to elk camp I developed a whine from the engine. I presumed it was the vacuum pump failing and removed the belt to install my non-vacuum pump belt. While the belt was off I started the motor to verify the noise was belt driven, it wasn't, pointing to a gear noise. Due to my remote location I drove the truck 15 miles to camp, 45 miles closer than town. I shut the truck down and waited. Two days later I started the truck and the noise was present instantly and got much louder when the oil pressure came up, I have a real gauge. This further led me, and my mechanic, the believe it was the gear train. We decided I should have it towed, and my insurance covered the tow (what a PITA) 255 miles to the shop.
The truck got delivered yesterday and the mechanic got the timing cover off today, and it's amazing I made it to camp. The oil pump housing broke right where the idler gear is. The broken housing caused the gear to contact the housing and allowed the gear to run crooked and damage the crank gear. Somehow the cam gear also has a broken tooth, probably from a piece of the broken housing contacting the gears.
The oil filter was full of metal, some of which was copper colored. The magnet in the pan had some metal on it, but not overly fuzzy.
The big questions are how much metal got thru the filer? I run a 15um filter vs the OEM 40um filter.
How much contaminated oil splashed up on the crank and cylinders while I was driving after the failure? I probably put about 45-60 minutes of run time on it from when I heard the noise. Before hearing the noise I was doing 30-50 on a dirt road with mud tires, the noise could have been masked for several miles.
What else is damaged that we cannot see?
So, what to do!?
Do I have the broken pump and cam gear replaced and hope nothing was damaged? The crank gear is pitted and damaged, but not to the complete point of mandatory replacement.
Do I have the engine pulled, and fix all the broken gears?
Do I rebuild it since it's out and the crank is out.
I have 93k miles and 2800 hours on the motor, surely no where near soon enough for this kind of failure. I bought a Cummins because they don't this!!
Have any of you seen this before? My mechanic hasn't.
Sorry, no photos yet. I wasn't thinking about that when I got to the shop.
On a positive note I had a great week with my dad and brother, and filled my elk and deer tags.
The truck got delivered yesterday and the mechanic got the timing cover off today, and it's amazing I made it to camp. The oil pump housing broke right where the idler gear is. The broken housing caused the gear to contact the housing and allowed the gear to run crooked and damage the crank gear. Somehow the cam gear also has a broken tooth, probably from a piece of the broken housing contacting the gears.
The oil filter was full of metal, some of which was copper colored. The magnet in the pan had some metal on it, but not overly fuzzy.
The big questions are how much metal got thru the filer? I run a 15um filter vs the OEM 40um filter.
How much contaminated oil splashed up on the crank and cylinders while I was driving after the failure? I probably put about 45-60 minutes of run time on it from when I heard the noise. Before hearing the noise I was doing 30-50 on a dirt road with mud tires, the noise could have been masked for several miles.
What else is damaged that we cannot see?
So, what to do!?
Do I have the broken pump and cam gear replaced and hope nothing was damaged? The crank gear is pitted and damaged, but not to the complete point of mandatory replacement.
Do I have the engine pulled, and fix all the broken gears?
Do I rebuild it since it's out and the crank is out.
I have 93k miles and 2800 hours on the motor, surely no where near soon enough for this kind of failure. I bought a Cummins because they don't this!!
Have any of you seen this before? My mechanic hasn't.
Sorry, no photos yet. I wasn't thinking about that when I got to the shop.
On a positive note I had a great week with my dad and brother, and filled my elk and deer tags.