Weird Subaru MISFIRE After Engine Swap? (2.5 SOHC)

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • Owner of this 2008 Subaru Legacy says that he can't figure out why the replacement engine is MISFIRING on cylinder 4.
    He already tried a different injector, coil, and plug, with no change.
    From the driver's seat we can instantly tell that it's a COMPRESSION problem, but WHERE IS THE LEAK?
    And can we fix this Subaru "NPR" without buying any extra parts?
    NTS 500 DUAL CAMERA BORESCOPE:
    www.amazon.com...
    THINKTOOL PROS: *****TOTAL $150 OFF!!***
    www.amazon.com...
    Enjoy!
    Ivan

Komentáře • 330

  • @brandonsnider7907
    @brandonsnider7907 Před rokem +46

    You're going to be the world's foremost expert on valves by the end of this year.

    • @JackS425
      @JackS425 Před rokem +3

      I wonder if its something in the fuel
      For his area. I have a really hard time believing that all these burnt valves are a coincidence

    • @davidnorton5887
      @davidnorton5887 Před rokem +1

      Only exhausts, not inlets lol.

    • @TheBry_Guy
      @TheBry_Guy Před rokem +3

      @@JackS425 the valve problems aren't caused by the area, it's all the valve problems in the area that gravitate to him being one of the few that will guarantee diags and repair without charging crazy dealer fees.

    • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
      @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics  Před rokem +6

      @@TheBry_Guy that's a good point... Don't know of any other shops that actually repair internal engine mechanical issues... They just swap them lol

    • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
      @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics  Před rokem +12

      Hah I am running out of room on the shelf of shame with the growing bad valve collection 😂

  • @John-dp3ln
    @John-dp3ln Před rokem +11

    Was a budget repair on an old car. Did as little and as much as necessary. Good job Ivan.

  • @user-sq8rs2lc9c
    @user-sq8rs2lc9c Před rokem +5

    IVAN,
    THANK YOU FOR BEING THE MOST PROFESSIONALLY ACCURATE STUDY CASES ON CZcams IN PROVIDING THE MOST DETAIL DATA FOR US TO FOLLOW IN AN ACCURATE MANNER.
    YOUR STUDY CASES ARE SO VALUABLE TO ALL TECHANICIANS FOR LIFE AND TOTALLY PRESENTED IN AN ORIGANISED MANNER WITH IDENTIFICATION VIN ETC.
    THANK YOU AGAIN.

  • @dharley189
    @dharley189 Před rokem +11

    That starter crank bolt trick was around a long time ago. We used to do that in 1973 when I worked at Subaru dealer. They had valve guide and rocker arm shaft issues way back then. I still have the tool to drive guides in from fifty years ago. Hadn’t had to do one in forty years because they also had severe rust issues as well back then 😳

  • @davidbennett8707
    @davidbennett8707 Před rokem +5

    Looking at all those bubbles on them valve's when lightly blowing air in the ports I think I would be doing a valve lap job at least? On the head off the original engine

  • @ChrisWilliams-pu8pj
    @ChrisWilliams-pu8pj Před rokem +16

    Ivan, What differentiates you from many is it obvious that you are always watching, asking questions and paying attention. You have gained a tremendous amount of insight as you not only diagnose but also do the physical repairs. I appreciate your approach to these issues.

  • @markB40
    @markB40 Před rokem +9

    Great to watch the diagnosing of various problems from different cars, some of the repairs are questionable at times but then he’s doing the repairs as cheap as he can for his customers.

    • @hhn2002
      @hhn2002 Před rokem +3

      When trying to keep cost low experimentation is necessary. Results are often surprisingly good. Obviously it will come with higher risk of comeback but I believe it is worth it.

    • @paulsolovyovsky1702
      @paulsolovyovsky1702 Před rokem +3

      Price vs performance. If it gets the job done to last another 2-3 years versus buying a new car it's a win. Otherwise many of these cars would be in the junk yard.

  • @SHSPVR
    @SHSPVR Před rokem +15

    One thing you did not factor in was weak valve springs I'll feel it is good idea to redo all the valve seat and face of the valve the right way.

  • @SomeRandomHuman717
    @SomeRandomHuman717 Před rokem +20

    I guess there's no machine shop around? The head you put on needed six of eight valves reconditioned (which really means all of them needed to be redone) and the head resurfaced for flatness.

    • @rcf8367
      @rcf8367 Před rokem +5

      Definitely a budget repair, valves & seats needed cleaned & lapped, or even replaced if bent or had low margins.

    • @brainndamage
      @brainndamage Před rokem +4

      Yup, what I said on his previous videos, these really are extreme budget repairs, this one needed a full head job. And you can't resurface just one side of a OHC head of it's bent, the bend will also be on the cam side and after resurfacing and torquing the head on the cam will bind in the cam bearings and destroy it. It can usually be done by straightening or by resurfacing both sides of the head so they're in plane. Which adds to the expense and time.

    • @bigkenny93
      @bigkenny93 Před rokem +9

      And a 100,000 miles later, you guys will still be saying, "it's going to fail any minute now"! Lmao!

    • @davidstleon8388
      @davidstleon8388 Před rokem +6

      Let Ivan learn like the rest of us have, making mistakes and learning over the years....He's defininetely a gambler at heart!....I'm all for sending the cylinder heads to the machine shop for inspection, head resurfacing and valve work....Also, the head bolt torque spec altering will eventually come back to bite in the butt.

    • @paulmuff9883
      @paulmuff9883 Před rokem +5

      Yes most definitely all 8 should have been done 👍

  • @DaddyBeanDaddyBean
    @DaddyBeanDaddyBean Před rokem +6

    The white dots on the cam pulleys are "close" to the timing mark cast into the pulley, but can be a full tooth or more away. Use the dots to locate the mark, and the mark to index the belt & pulley. I found removing the lowest toothed idler makes it easy to get the belt back in position, and then roll that toothed pulley into position & get the bolt into it.

    • @mikemurphy7519
      @mikemurphy7519 Před rokem

      Don't bother trying, he is a hack when it comes to actual repairs.

  • @ring-and-run
    @ring-and-run Před rokem +4

    We need to get you a lift of some kind to save your back! That and a decent workbench. Love your content, thanks!

  • @2nickles647
    @2nickles647 Před rokem +5

    Chuck the valve onto a drill or drill press. You should see a wobble.

  • @amundsen575
    @amundsen575 Před rokem +3

    I leak test with gasoline on heads and boat exhaust manifolds , correct flatness with sandpaper, lap on a granite plate on the cheap, I use 12" x 18" self stick paper on scrap granite from granite counter shop or import surface plate.

  • @jfv65
    @jfv65 Před rokem +4

    You can also have valves 'kiss' the head if the engine was overrevved. Like on a downshift going down hill.
    It could have had valve float which means the valves could still have been slightly open when the piston was already at TDC. A broken cambelt usually causes way more damage.

  • @tomtke7351
    @tomtke7351 Před rokem

    They say the magic for any company is their book of lessons learned (LEARNED, not just experienced). You, Ivan, are an encyclopedia!

  • @Sandmansa
    @Sandmansa Před rokem +2

    I know how you feel about all these valve problems. I wonder if the valve guides are just slap worn out on that Subaru head? I'd love to see a tear down of it if you can, please. Oh, and thanks for at least checking on the intake valves. Makes me so happy to see a more thorough inspection. Loved that little poke about the lesson learned with the Volvo. I had to learn the hard way too.

  • @pinecone01
    @pinecone01 Před rokem +2

    lol who would have thought 2023 would bring an epidemic of busted valves to PHAD? Still enjoying the content!

  • @focus82grothm.84
    @focus82grothm.84 Před rokem +1

    Great diagnoses and work Ivan 😊👍

  • @ArtieTheStrongestManInTheWorld

    Im having the mysterious p302 on my 08 Subaru Outback XT Turbo i have been through the coil pack, injector, and still getting the check engine light when accelerating. I'm doing a compression test after watching this! Thanks for the info!

  • @robpeabo509
    @robpeabo509 Před rokem +5

    The valve train and cams were very clean on both the heads, No gunk or gunge. It looks like the original engine and the auction engine were maintained as far as oil replacement goes.
    I agree with one of the other posters, blowing compressed air from the outlet side probably was not the best way of checking if the valves were perfectly sealed. They are designed to seal the cylinder from leaking out, not having air being blown in from the outlet side. If a lot of air was passing trough, then yes, it may indicate an issue. In your case it was very minor air passing through in the reverse direction.

    • @noelcastle3986
      @noelcastle3986 Před rokem +2

      My son in law is a Subaru nut and puts big turbos on them for competition racing. He told me you had to limit the boost or fit heavier valve springs as the inlet valves can be pushed off their seats if the intake manifold pressure is too high. That sort of makes sense with what was suggested using compressed air around and against the rear of the valve.

    • @adotintheshark4848
      @adotintheshark4848 Před rokem +2

      That valve gap/misalignment was the true indicator of a bent valve

    • @jeffryblackmon4846
      @jeffryblackmon4846 Před rokem

      A leak in either direction is not desirable, especially when the reverse air is able to spread out and it's not at the higher compression levels.

  • @georgegonzalez2476
    @georgegonzalez2476 Před rokem +8

    Subaru started out as an aircraft engine manufacturer. A typical aircraft engine back then was designed to run at 100% power (good) but the average fighter plane was shot down after under 200 hours. So the engines did not have to be very long-lived. Unfortunately that design ethos may still be partly in play.

    • @gtemnykh
      @gtemnykh Před rokem +2

      The older smaller displacement EJ22s seem to have a VERY good reputation for running up to 200-300k miles, by which point the Subaru that it’s in is typically Swiss cheese up north. The North-American market specific EJ25s seem to have started the whole decade long head gasket fiasco, and the newer motors suffer from mpg-focused “improvements” in the form of low tension piston rings and water-thin oil.

  • @carljenkins5092
    @carljenkins5092 Před rokem

    Great video. It sounds perfect. We have close friends in Vermont who just purchased a new Subaru. After their last two foresters blew one of their head gaskets.

  • @JohnDoesGarage
    @JohnDoesGarage Před rokem

    I learned the breaker bar starter trick about forty five years ago. Another great video. Thank you very much.

  • @spelunkerd
    @spelunkerd Před rokem +11

    Just after 7:51 on the borescope views there seems to be a line across the valve seat, I was thinking it was a cracked valve seat. Was anything seen there after you got the head off?

    • @TreyCook21
      @TreyCook21 Před rokem

      Saw that and thought the same as well

  • @wallebo
    @wallebo Před rokem

    At the 14:34 mark "Learned my lesson from the Volvo!". That is as funny as it is apropos and shows that Ivan has a sense of humor and is good natured. Kudos! Good tip with the WD40.

  • @volks-jager
    @volks-jager Před rokem +4

    an in the car head job, not having head machined and only doing 1 side. this car will be back with a blown headgasket in the not to distant future. NA EJ25s are notorious for headgasket issues and judging by the oil all over the bottom on the engine they where already failing. this was a shadetree hack job

    • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
      @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics  Před rokem +3

      The side that I worked on no longer leaks with a new upgraded MLS gasket 😆👍

    • @thk7513
      @thk7513 Před rokem +1

      For right now.

    • @volks-jager
      @volks-jager Před rokem +2

      while not advisable, with the old single layer gasket you could often get away with just a quick clean with a white 3m bristle disk, but the MLS Turbo gaskets need a pristine surface. the old single layer gaskets generally just leak oil, but when an MLS fails it will push coolant into the overflow and overheat. doing Subaru headgaskets in the car is not a good idea. it literally take 45 minutes tops to pull the engine and put it on a stand where you can clean and torque everything properly.

  • @alyjaabirbachoo5354
    @alyjaabirbachoo5354 Před rokem

    Nice vid quick tip you can just put petrol in the valve port directly and you will see it leak out straight away without blowing air

  • @michaelslee4336
    @michaelslee4336 Před rokem

    Guy over the road was trying do undo his crank bolt but no matter how hard he pulled on the hand brake and had it in gear the car kept rolling forward.
    He had it in first gear so I told him to put in in overdrive instead and bingo off it came. That’s the problem when you think of first gear being the lowest but coming at it from the wrong direction.

  • @craiggoodwin9704
    @craiggoodwin9704 Před rokem

    Ivan, great job! That car sounds like a new one! I bet you saved that customer a lot of money with some common sense and knowing what you were doing. Thanks for Sharing! 🙂

  • @petepeabody8905
    @petepeabody8905 Před rokem

    Another straightforward diagnosis and repair

  • @aidanh4550
    @aidanh4550 Před rokem +1

    Starter bump was definitely thinking outside the box!

    • @mph5896
      @mph5896 Před rokem

      I have done that quite a few times, and it works. I also have heated the head of the bolt with oxygen/acetaline. Heat gets down the bolt and it comes off.

    • @markrages
      @markrages Před rokem +1

      It's an old shade-tree practice. But check which way the crank spins first! On a Honda F22 it will only tighten the crank bolt.

    • @thk7513
      @thk7513 Před rokem

      Been doing it since the 60's. Yes I'm an old fart!

  • @robertoruiz7069
    @robertoruiz7069 Před rokem

    Hi Ivan,I like this type of video where you show everything.Your testing method on the valves! he's my view,while i believe the replacement head will work and may last a long time.IN the past when i did valve repairs for people with little money,i found testing like you showed won't give you the full story.Here's why>New grinding of say a 3 angle valve job gives you a .062 -.082 Contact from the valve to the seat.Old worn in seats are a lot wider,sometimes .100-.125 from my experience.The wider the seat, the faster the heat transfer.but the seal may not as good .That's why you got the air leakage on your test.Also the compression pressure HELPS to seal the seat.A better way to test used heads is to fill the camber will water and look inside the ports for leaks.Just saying this so people don't freak out when they test using AIR pressure,method. And i hope this gets guys learning how to repair -the incentive to read on how stuff works,so they can learn why you test the way you do.In this case the camera was not able to pick up the problem,but the leak-down test kept pointing to the exhaust valves.Hense you HAD to remove the head,which is a great lesson on confirmation of leak.

  • @AP9311
    @AP9311 Před rokem +4

    Nice and quick checks from experience that counts and learned from the Volvo job! Do them all valves lol. I didn't see you lap them or put them in!? Haha. It's great thing you got the old heads from the old motor! Excellent video, Ivan!

  • @golfmaniac
    @golfmaniac Před rokem +8

    Ivan, do you ever get a customer that has enough money for you to do a proper repair? It seems most of your customers want the Russian roulette repair, where it could go 1000 or 50000 miles. Place your bets on this one.

    • @tomtke7351
      @tomtke7351 Před rokem

      yeah.... place your bets!!

    • @gtemnykh
      @gtemnykh Před rokem +1

      Judging by all the cars coming to him with empty gas tanks and dead batteries… take a guess lol

  • @dudleydeplorable5307
    @dudleydeplorable5307 Před rokem +3

    Old school: always did a full head job...

  • @robertmedina6875
    @robertmedina6875 Před rokem

    Man you are burning a trail of smoke I'm getting tired just watching you 😂😂 Awesome video!!

  • @davidraezer5937
    @davidraezer5937 Před rokem

    The bent valve might have been caused when the last person did cylinder head gaskets. On the engines that have the variable lift if you are not careful when installing the rockers you can trap a valve and bend the stem. Last engine i rebuilt had several bent valves when I went to replace the valve seals.

  • @phprofYT
    @phprofYT Před rokem +11

    "Can someone tell me why those exhaust valves are not sealing?" 7:00
    Sure. It is a Subaru.

    • @ua7pyro591
      @ua7pyro591 Před rokem

      LMAO 😂

    • @amdstrollo3074
      @amdstrollo3074 Před rokem +2

      It's crazy how they went from horrible build quality and awful gas mileage to some of the most reliable and best in class gas mileage for an AWD vehicle. My crosstrek has been nothing but amazing since new.

    • @arcademania7544
      @arcademania7544 Před rokem

      @@amdstrollo3074 😂 found the "Biden voter"

    • @arcademania7544
      @arcademania7544 Před rokem

      @@amdstrollo3074 😂 found the "Biden voter"

  • @osuuma6935
    @osuuma6935 Před rokem

    Ivan, I am watching you check the valves with the compressed air, and laughing out loud. I don't think a Subaru is in my future. Ever.

  • @lvsqcsl
    @lvsqcsl Před rokem

    I am going to Andersonville, Georgia this weekend. I hope the ol' Mercury doesn't burn valves; I might need to come and see you. Seems like your wife mentioned she would like to have a Subaru. Great video!

    • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
      @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics  Před rokem +1

      My wife wants a Maserati HAHAHA

    • @lvsqcsl
      @lvsqcsl Před rokem

      @@PineHollowAutoDiagnostics I'm sure you will politely tell her that isn't wise.

  • @baxrok2.
    @baxrok2. Před rokem

    Another PHAD rescue! Thanks Ivan.

  • @madmike214
    @madmike214 Před rokem +3

    When doing these heads (I've done countless) I un bolt the engine mounts and just push the engine all the way to one side, only thing you need to be mindful of are the inner axle boots... Sometimes the tulip will pull out... I've done so many of these I would just automatically take the extra 15min pull the axles... So easy. And as for getting the heads back on I pull the head bolts half way out (or just enough) use a rubber band wrapped around the bolt heads to keep them in place...easy peasy.

  • @juanlara9409
    @juanlara9409 Před rokem +3

    I didn’t understand why you don’t send every head you pull off for a valve job? If you had done this with the Volvo the customer would get a better result! Cost $100 here in Texas for a valve job, it’s cheap insurance, find a machine shop😊

    • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
      @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics  Před rokem +3

      $100?? Maybe I should ship my heads to Texas 😄👍

    • @madmike214
      @madmike214 Před rokem +1

      I don't know about where Ivan is but a single Subaru head job in lower eastern pa is 200-300

    • @2aminitials
      @2aminitials Před rokem

      $200 to $300 is nothing if you have to take the engine apart a second time due to it not being fixed the first time. Buy once cry once.

    • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
      @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics  Před rokem +1

      @@madmike214 that's how much I would charge just for 2 round trips to bring the head to the machine shop 😆

    • @madmike214
      @madmike214 Před rokem

      @@PineHollowAutoDiagnostics that's because you live in the sticks 😆 I'm a few miles away from a machine shop but they are pricy...they wanted 4500 to rebuild my 4.3 for my van that has a ring issue on cylinder 1, I experimented with rislone oil additive stuff and it actually worked 😆 scored wall and all...misfire virtually gone.... I might still pull the head back off and replace the rings and hone that cylinder just to try it... Can has 330k on it

  • @lawrencecavens5760
    @lawrencecavens5760 Před rokem

    Valve Lapping needs or could to be done in order to re-seat the valves after inspection to see how much pitting on the valve and the head there is..

  • @jftureson
    @jftureson Před rokem +1

    I'd reinstall the old head but after lapping the valves. Easy enough to take them out and lap them in

  • @tracydiller9378
    @tracydiller9378 Před rokem +1

    Great video Ivan as always and it was nice the owner still had the old engine and the head was in good shape.

  • @edwardjames6070
    @edwardjames6070 Před rokem

    it was a beautiful sound when you started it after the work was done.

  • @safetbekiroski1873
    @safetbekiroski1873 Před rokem

    What causes a bent valve? Bent valves occur when the piston makes contact with the valves. This causes the valve to be no longer able to seal the cylinder correctly. Many engines are interference engines, meaning the piston travels upward beyond the lowest point that the valves travel downward during normal operation.

  • @baja-automotive
    @baja-automotive Před rokem

    Well done sure.
    You did mention the sonar vehicle was in a accident.
    SOHC EJ engines, especially ones with miles, can jump time by a tooth. We saw a ton of that back in the day.
    The interference of the piston to valve design is tight, and if a piston kisses a valve you won’t even see a nick on the piston face.
    With all the valve work you find I’m shocked you haven’t shipped for a walnut blaster, seen some good deals on the jungle site for $400.
    Again good job

  • @inothome
    @inothome Před rokem +3

    Learn to say no!!!! These "hero" repairs are going to cause problems down the road. It's awesome to help out people and get them back up and running, but it can also ed up costing you your reputation.

  • @mykofreder1682
    @mykofreder1682 Před rokem

    Mechanics who doing an engine out on one of these Subaru engines, should do the due diligence of checking the valves. After pulling engines the gaskets etc to are minor, all values closed compression probably also should be done while the engine is out of the car. I would probably pull the heads and remove all the carbon crust on the valves and pistons using some solvent and plastic brush and do a visual.

  • @CharlesAndCars
    @CharlesAndCars Před rokem

    I've seen the valve guide problem. Whenever I take the heads off or am rebuilding one I have GSC "stopper" guides installed by machine shop. That keeps them from ever migrating again.

  • @garydole9427
    @garydole9427 Před rokem

    Pour water in the port and watch for drips at the valves then rap the valve tips with a small hammer to clear any debris and refill to recheck. Then set it in the sun to dry.

  • @LesReeves
    @LesReeves Před rokem

    I would have removed all the valves re-seated them & then put the head back on. I you use a cordless drill on the end of the valves (after putting grinding paste on the lip) & grind to your heart desire or until they seat makes the job easy & guarenteed to seal.Cheers Ivan the valve man.(your new handle LOL).As always great content thank you.

  • @blow0me
    @blow0me Před rokem

    Very unusual to fit heads where you know for sure the valves are leaking ? Some seemed to be a fair bit too

  • @flatdaddio
    @flatdaddio Před rokem

    Wow, I wonder what happened to the valve to bend it like that. Good fix!

    • @adotintheshark4848
      @adotintheshark4848 Před rokem +2

      maybe it threw a timing belt earlier or was over-reved at some point.

  • @romthomas3087
    @romthomas3087 Před rokem +7

    Not good! Should do better, ALL those valves are leaking.......

    • @evanosborne2410
      @evanosborne2410 Před 8 měsíci +1

      You have to take the age of the car into consideration. This repair will probably last the life of the vehicle.

  • @user-my7hv5ld7b
    @user-my7hv5ld7b Před rokem

    a machine shop skim cut on head and pressure test is cheap insurance a wire wheel on a drill does a nice job on valve face

  • @johnstancato8785
    @johnstancato8785 Před rokem +1

    Just curious why wouldn't you lap the old valves just to make sure they're getting a good seat since you have the head off

  • @johnleinen7167
    @johnleinen7167 Před rokem

    HaHa ,Ivan MR SUBARU is rolling around on the floor laughing at you working on this !

  • @NoWr2Run
    @NoWr2Run Před rokem

    HOLY CROW those valves leaked LIKE HELL, I would have lapped them all.
    I've never seen that before on the 2.5 ROO ENGINES, VERY BAD SEATING VALVES.

  • @beaverc2884
    @beaverc2884 Před rokem +5

    Would it have been that hard to lap the valves?

    • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
      @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics  Před rokem +7

      Customer said just get rid of the misfire cheapest way possible... runs nice and smooth so good to go :)

    • @vilefly
      @vilefly Před rokem

      @@PineHollowAutoDiagnostics Ah, the Captain Bligh scenario. "Aye, aye, Captain Bligh!" 😁

  • @deniscudahy4549
    @deniscudahy4549 Před rokem +1

    In the Uk we are getting similar things due to them changing the Fuel , burning valves on older cars

    • @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics
      @PineHollowAutoDiagnostics  Před rokem

      Very interesting. What did they change about the fuel?

    • @deniscudahy4549
      @deniscudahy4549 Před rokem

      @Pine Hollow Auto Diagnostics they have changed the ethanol mixture the fuel,so we are see a lot of problems with valves and fuel lines rotting out

    • @thk7513
      @thk7513 Před rokem +1

      @@deniscudahy4549 Had the same problem in this country when we made the switch to Ethanol added fuels.

  • @JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT

    Wow! What are the odds of getting so many valve issues in a row? Great that you had the old head to replace (equally warped, of course). Maybe it's just me, but it seemed like too much leakage on the "good valves". Possibly a regrind would cure the problem, but would customer pay for it? The car seems to run fine, nevertheless 🙂 Good job, Ivan!

  • @chemicalvamp
    @chemicalvamp Před 3 měsíci

    Good work man.

  • @jeffryblackmon4846
    @jeffryblackmon4846 Před rokem

    That's a good trick to loosen a crankshaft bolt. Scottie gets a cookie. Would it have been easier to remove the engine before attempting the repair? @ 13:00 to 13:35 I saw all 4 valves leaking air.

  • @simonjones7785
    @simonjones7785 Před 10 měsíci

    I used to own a850T5 estate station wagon to youa big bucket but boy could it shift

  • @johnclamshellsp1969
    @johnclamshellsp1969 Před rokem +1

    The owner of that Subaru, should take the other good head off old engine, the head with bad valves, and get them cleaned and machined. Have two perfect copies on hand. I would.

  • @ThunderbirdRocket
    @ThunderbirdRocket Před rokem

    Thanks for sharing your expertise .

  • @dosiodosev740
    @dosiodosev740 Před rokem

    Always intertaining, thank you

  • @kerrylewis2581
    @kerrylewis2581 Před rokem

    Ivan would need a shop the size of an Amazon warehouse if he wanted to hang pictures of happy customers. Another car comes in broken and leaves happy

  • @geoepi321975
    @geoepi321975 Před rokem

    Ivan you can put water on the top and shoot some air

  • @scottgreene2500
    @scottgreene2500 Před rokem +2

    I’ll have to add warped heads to the saying, “Oil consumption. Its what makes a Subaru a Subaru.”

  • @462ANIMAL
    @462ANIMAL Před rokem

    I like Subaru’s , but probably has something to do with all the snow we get.. We got over 4ft in 24hrs this past winter.. the Forester was pushing snow up the hood ! I’m on my second Subaru , only issue has been leaky head gaskets , dripping a bit of oil.. 1 litre in 4,500 miles.. so no big deal.

  • @DIYmotorcycle
    @DIYmotorcycle Před 7 měsíci

    The first Subaru head job I did was with the engine in the car and I swore to myself I will never do that again it's too easy to get the motor out you're 95% there to get the motor out of the car to do the head gaskets.

  • @Honeypot-x9s
    @Honeypot-x9s Před rokem +1

    I wouldn’t trust that compressed air test just because the way the valves are designed to see old is from the inside going out not the outside going in so much so compressed air might be more easily able to find a way through from the backside.
    Then, again, that being said, I can’t say I’ve ever seen that either

  • @RussellBooth1977
    @RussellBooth1977 Před rokem

    I didn't realize that Subaru fitted a timing belt to the EJ25 engine because I thought that they went to the timing chain setup in 2005.
    I'd say it.snapped a timing belt & bent a valve at one stage,my brother bought a 2000 model Subaru Forester which had that issue so the owner got the cylinder heads repaired & sold it to him,it runs the EJ20J engine.
    But then he ran it on LP gas which caused it to drop a valve so my cousin's partner whose a Subaru trained mechanic rebuilt the cylinder heads or got them rebuilt at a cylinder head repair shop for $3500 AUD including new valves, valve seats, valve springs, valve stem oil seals,etc at almost cost price !

  • @ferrumignis
    @ferrumignis Před rokem +5

    Why check the valve sealing on the replacement head but not lap in the leaking ones?

    • @Malc180s
      @Malc180s Před rokem +3

      Time and money? It's a business, not a hobby.

  • @michaeldunagan8268
    @michaeldunagan8268 Před 2 měsíci

    @1:16
    Rxactly why I will never attenpt a used engine in any of my vehicles.
    Whenever I will need to rebuild existing engines of mine, I will get a remanufactured one.

  • @NoWr2Run
    @NoWr2Run Před rokem

    YA, Turbo's make a HUGE DIFFERENCE IN PERFORMANCE, HUGE.
    I remember back in the early 80's all the rage was the Mustang GT 5.0. Then this kid bought a Mustang 4 CYL. with a Turbo & was CLEANING HOUSE WITH IT.
    These were all STOCK ENGINES, NOT MODIFIED AT ALL. Well maybe exhaust mods. some had.

  • @Skandalos
    @Skandalos Před rokem +4

    For the leakage test Id rather put the fluid in from the other side and just watch if some leaks through. The compressed air might have enough power to push the valves a bit open.

    • @mikemurphy7519
      @mikemurphy7519 Před rokem +2

      Not even close. That both heads had leaky valves that needed reseating.

    • @inothome
      @inothome Před rokem +2

      @@mikemurphy7519 Agreed, there is no way using a blow gun like that should lift a valve enough to let air come out. Those valves are all leaking and only a matter of time before the next miss.

  • @dosgos
    @dosgos Před rokem +1

    Can't beat the Russian Repairs! These are great for customers on a budget. They also keep decent cars on the road which is better than sending them to the crusher IMHO. Alas, most mechanics in my area just swap parts.

  • @satamanschmidt3428
    @satamanschmidt3428 Před rokem

    What a shock. It wasn't a head gasket? What's always pissed me off about Subaru, other than Mr. Subaru who I consider to be a clown, is that they knew they had a problem. Knew how to fix the problem using an MLS head gasket which they did on the WRX, and continued to use the same shit head gaskets on their non-turbocharged cars. Why Subaru has such a cult following is a mystery to me. I give you max credit for being able to take the head off in the car. Everybody I know pulls the engine, which isn't that hard on a Subaru, to do the heads. I loved your precision machinist straight edge 2X4 that looked like it was cut with an axe.

  • @ehsnils
    @ehsnils Před rokem

    If I remember right the cylinder #4 is often the first cylinder that fails.

  • @rtumark
    @rtumark Před rokem +2

    “King of Valves”

  • @oneeyedjack4727
    @oneeyedjack4727 Před rokem

    I wonder if someone doing a timing belt job could have bent the valves while turning the cam to align the timing marks. When replacing a belt on a four cylinder I always leave the crank 90 deg BTDC to have all the pistons mid travel to clear the valves if I have to adjust cam timing for any reason. Put the cams in time then turn crank to TDC last.

  • @GarnConstructionInc
    @GarnConstructionInc Před rokem

    The wd40 test made the original intake valves look leaky. A bent valve should leave a mark on the piston or the seat unless it came from somewhere else. Nice diag and repair to get it running.

  • @michaelweatherhead9470
    @michaelweatherhead9470 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the video Ivan great job getting it done. Take care of yourself and family and be Blessed ❤️❤️👍.

  • @cuauhtemocchavez4160
    @cuauhtemocchavez4160 Před 2 měsíci

    Mine smokes a little, and there is a misfire on 3/4 looked like there wires where swapped

  • @robertlehouillier5497

    Love your style. Thanks

  • @JackTatum-yw2hr
    @JackTatum-yw2hr Před rokem +2

    Subaru + misfire = fried cat. Not the furry cat either.

  • @luisgonzalez3057
    @luisgonzalez3057 Před rokem

    Ivan "THE VALVE WHISPERER"😂

  • @htownblue11
    @htownblue11 Před rokem

    Welcome to Pine Hollow Auto Valve Diagnostics…..if you’ve got a leak, we’ll take a peak! We should Franchise Ivan! 😂😂😂😂

  • @calholli
    @calholli Před rokem

    I wonder if it's just really weak valve springs?
    If it were my own car, I'd go ahead and lap all the valves in since you have it apart. But I can understand that being a lot of labor for a customer.

  • @juanrodriguez-ry6yt
    @juanrodriguez-ry6yt Před rokem

    i see neway valve seat cutter kit if this keeps up.

  • @mikemurphy7519
    @mikemurphy7519 Před rokem +6

    This is painful to watch. That ruler is not a straight edge to check for a warped cylinder head. All the valves leak, the head needs a complete valve job, throwing this head back on is a complete hack job.

    • @inothome
      @inothome Před rokem +5

      Yeah, some of these repairs lately are really pushing it. Even if the customer doesn't want to spend the money, then just refuse to do the work. These are going to start causing real headaches and not worth it. You go from hero to ZERO really quick when these cheap repairs fail. People expect these repairs to last, even when told it's a shitty fix.

    • @mph5896
      @mph5896 Před rokem +2

      I am a borderline hack. Trying to get better. BUT that ruler 🤣. And even I would not have bolted that used head on with the valves the way they were.

    • @thk7513
      @thk7513 Před rokem +3

      On the Volvo repair, somebody mentioned Ivan should be an A&P mechanic (aircraft). Ivan wouldn't last too long. The FAA takes great pleasure in bending someone over a desk and having their way with them for not following proper procedures be a pilot, controller, or mechanic. Ivan has lately has taken the short cut route to repairs. Get diagnostician but piss poor mechanic and practices. All 8 valves were probably leaking and the donor head valves were leaking. Ivan's repair credibility is taking a ride in the round porcelain bowl.

    • @mikemurphy7519
      @mikemurphy7519 Před rokem +2

      @@inothome He will learn the hard way. He should set standards regardless of what the client wants or can afford. The client had the money to buy a new engine but doesn't have a few hundred more to do a proper valve job...he is letting the client's wallet dictate his reputation.
      I have told him on several occasions to buy some fender covers and to use them, his response is that is absurd. If he dragged wires across my fenders it would be the last time he works on my car and if there was any scratch he would pay for a complete repaint.

  • @6996brandyl
    @6996brandyl Před rokem +1

    Why wasn't the motor tested before it was switched out?
    I thought he bought a whole wreck car at the auction 1:08 ?
    Or was it a junkyard motor that was on a auction site like Ebay?

  • @simpledude70
    @simpledude70 Před rokem

    Master of valves...

  • @tetttettamilli6761
    @tetttettamilli6761 Před rokem

    @Ivan - K, oaused at 3:15; no visible signs; valve springs (mushed-down), worn cam lobe, carbon build-up?

  • @mikechiodetti4482
    @mikechiodetti4482 Před rokem

    It looked like both heads had exhaust valve leaks. Oh well, he'll be back with one or the other that have valve leaks or more.