Wayne,
I also had a heck of a time pulling my woodruff key out of my crank when
disassembling my engine. I tried the prybar, heat wrench, hammer, vice
grips, .... All to no avail. I finally gave up and requested that the
machine shop that was doing the boring, decking, boiling and polishing pull
it out. The shop owner said they do this all the time, and that he used
machinist's tricks to pull it out. My bet is that he had an elephant pull
it out.
Anyway, I digress. If you cannot do it, let your machinist try.
Eric Conrad
'76 TR6 (CF52678U)
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-6pack@autox.team.net [mailto:owner-6pack@autox.team.net]On
Behalf Of Wayne Ross
Sent: Tuesday, September 17, 2002 2:24 PM
To: 6pack
Subject: Woodruff Key
Listers,
Taking apart my engine has been pretty straight forward so far, I had a hell
of a time pulling the head off by myself, but after hitting the head upward
with a hammer and a piece of wood all around the head a few times, the head
started to break free from the gasket.
Wow, what a back breaker!
I have a problem with the woodruff key in the crankshaft. Is there a trick
to getting this bad boy out of the keyway? I plan on trying some WD40 and a
visegrip to pull it out, maybe with a few taps against the visegrip with a
hammer to help it free? Any suggestions?
My rocker shaft is toast, I plan on buying a new (possibly harder) shaft
from one of the big three. Has anyone installed the external oil feed line
offered by the big three? If you have, did you install valve seals to
prevent burning oil? Do you think this extra oil to the top of the engine is
actually helping to keep the rockers, tappets, etc. oiled?
Wayne
Westport, MA
1973 TR6 (Mallard)
Unlimited Long Distance only $29.95/ month!
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