I am about to remove the 1.8 CVH engine and gearbox from my donor Sierra, the Haynes manual states that the lifting points are at the top of the
engine block. I have found these but they are just two tapped holes in the block.
My question is; is there a standard lifting bracket available to bolt into these holes. I am using a crane to lift the engine.
Also I noticed, on "A Racing Car is Born", that they used rope to thread through lifting brackets and support engine. Is this the usual way of
connecting engine to crane.
Thanks for help anyone can give.
John.
Although the corrct way to lift the engine would be to bolt lifting brackets to the engine, it is usually done by looping a rope through the inlet manifold and exhaust manifold and tying at the top. Make sure the rope is strong enough, not just a piece of string!! Also make sure your knot is tight. Probably find everyone here has done this at some time or other.
there should be 2 loops one on each manifold,use old seatbelts as a sling if you havnt got a chain
making up a couple brackets, if you already have steel for the build, would be pretty easy....
I looped around the water pump body too. NOT the shaft.
Heres how its done on a V6.
Rescued attachment engine.jpg
my fave is to jack the car as high as poss and lower the engin on jacks and slide out the front
if your strippin the car and dont need to move it u can get steering and suspension out with it in 1 go
Thanks guys, I appreciate the advice.
John.
if you are scrapping the sierra then my fav way is to cut the slam panel and everthing below it out. that way you don't ned to lift the engine very
high it comes straight out the front with the box still on of course....
best of luck
John,
I stripped my sierra yesterday and now have on pile of bits I don’t need and all the bits I want, as well as the shell cut up into sections (with a
bolsters chisel) and loaded into the trailer awaiting the local tip opening on Monday. Good job the neighbours were away as the wife says I was making
a bit of noise!
Anyway I digress, I removed the complete front sub frame in one go, then lifted the body up and over. The interior and doors, bonnet etc were already
removed so it was surprisingly light.
10 hours from driving the car into the garage to caring it out in bits, I need a lie down.
Ian
Yeh, unbolt the subframe and gearbox in one go. Anti roll bar and front uprights and the steering column as it comes through the bulk head. take out
the dash and all the bits in there (pedals steering column etc) get the wiring loom pulled out up to the fuse box, unbolt the fuse box and cut a
channel with a small angle grinder from the fuse box hole down to where the wiring loom goes through the bulk head and pull all the wires out and dump
them on the engine. Unbolt everthing else in the engine bay and put on engine.
Lift car over engine and back then remove rear subframe and fuel tank. Put car shell on trailer ready to be taken to metal merchant. Total time : 3
hours 12 mins, in the dark with only torches.
I kept doors on and cut the wiring loom where it goes grommet, where it goes up side of windscreen and at rear passenger doors, remembering not to cut
the handbrake wire of course! This was on a 1600 pinto, the more upmarket cars have a more complicated wiring loom, especially the EFI's as it passes
through the bulkhead in 4 different places.
Did I say 10 hours .........
I meant one hour starting int middle of night with no tourches only candles n pot ole n't middle of road with only me bare 'ands n't adjustable
spanner!!!!!
quote:
Originally posted by eenud
Did I say 10 hours .........
I meant one hour starting int middle of night with no tourches only candles n pot ole n't middle of road with only me bare 'ands n't adjustable spanner!!!!!
Lucky bugger!!
quote:
Originally posted by Mark H
Lucky bugger!!
Last Sierra I took to pieces, it ran out of petrol as I was approaching the garage. By the time it had coasted to a halt I had completely dismantled
it, down to the individual nuts and bolts, I had cut the panels into pieces small enough to go through a letter box and nearly but not quite burned my
hands on the still hot exhaust manifold.
John
You were lucky I come from Arabia where I'd done on 10 counts of thievin camels!
If any of us had cars as decent and fast as our bullsh*t, we'd be the envy of men everywhere!
I'll be happy if I get the friggin Sierra out of my garage, so my locost doesn't rust to death.
quote:
Originally posted by interestedparty
Last Sierra I took to pieces, it ran out of petrol as I was approaching the garage. By the time it had coasted to a halt I had completely dismantled it, down to the individual nuts and bolts, I had cut the panels into pieces small enough to go through a letter box and nearly but not quite burned my hands on the still hot exhaust manifold.
John
quote:
Originally posted by jollygreengiant
You were lucky I come from Arabia where I'd done on 10 counts of thievin camels!
Today I managed to finish cutting up the Sierra, clearing out the garage, and putting my rolling chassis inside for the first time since I got it!
It took me about 10 hours too, all cut into "handy" liftable pieces.
Where is it now? In the back garden of course. it takes about three times the space, and will be about a dozen car loads to the trip.
Do I have to include the cost of a new interior in my wifes car as a disposal cost? What about a new tumble dryer, where I almost ripped the door
from its hinges with the back subframe?
Cheers,
Mark
forgive me for sounding stupid (but here goes anyway) wouldn't it have been a lot easier to have your local scrappy take it away in one bit? it cost me a tenner for the chap to come round with his hiab..
I'd def go the 'take it away in one go' after trying to cut a car up with an angle grinder. Must've cost at least £10 just for the cutting discs never mind all the t-cut I had to buy to get the metal crap off my neighbours paintwork. Tried loads of methods but the best, quickest and cheapest is to leave it whole.
quote:
Originally posted by Viper
forgive me for sounding stupid (but here goes anyway) wouldn't it have been a lot easier to have your local scrappy take it away in one bit? it cost me a tenner for the chap to come round with his hiab..
Viper,
Believe me, it would have been MUCH easier to get rid in one go. Especially half way through when in no way could it be called fun any more.
I went to the local scrappies, and he didn't want to pick it up for cash, let me drag it there or anything. He just didn't want it!
In hindsight, I should have spent more time finding someone who would pick it up. If I was a skank, I could have dumped it, but, well, I'm not!
In fact, now I'm not using most of the bits from the Sierra that I planned to - engine, diff, loom etc (plans changed half way through!) I could have
brought individual parts and saved loads of time. That said, I sold enough parts on Ebay to cover the 50 quid it cost me.
At least the garage is clear for a good start in 2003!
Have a good Christmas and properous new year!