Mercury 305 rebuild | part 2

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 9

  • @jt496
    @jt496 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice. Great tips

  • @TheDrakenZ
    @TheDrakenZ Před 3 lety +1

    Beautiful work dude!

  • @joenascimento696
    @joenascimento696 Před 2 lety

    Nice job looks good

  • @mrsuarez430
    @mrsuarez430 Před rokem +1

    Great job dude hey do you need to take off the pan to get to the timing chain cover gasket I have a bit of leak also I have really good risers but want to keep it that way it was a freshwater engine but now it's in miami so naturally going to be using in saltwater think if I paint it inside with good rust engine paint will help or it's kinda pointless? Thanks in advance would like a 2nd opinion

    • @DarkBloodMechanical
      @DarkBloodMechanical  Před rokem +1

      Hi. and Thanks for watching!
      The chain cover cannot come off without removing the pan. it has a lip which holds the gasket, and the gasket is fastened between the oil pan and the block. the only way to do this, is if your willing to cut the gasket right where the lips are, and then reseal is with silicone, but this is very unlikely to hold. As for the paint, painting will always help prevent rust. so if you can get a good clean surface, then its worth doing a quick coat or 2 of paint. The best option is to do, is to bring the block down to bare metal, prime it, then paint it. but this is not always an option. I hope this helps.

    • @mrsuarez430
      @mrsuarez430 Před rokem +1

      @@DarkBloodMechanical oh awesome! Thanks bud good to know I'm going to pull the engine out tomorrow I have searay 21.5 that's horribly tight to work on might as well put in a new starter lol thanks again 👍👍

    • @DarkBloodMechanical
      @DarkBloodMechanical  Před rokem

      @@mrsuarez430 No worries! hope it goes well!

  • @mikeespi5480
    @mikeespi5480 Před rokem

    I'd like to know what will this set one back with this type of work?

    • @DarkBloodMechanical
      @DarkBloodMechanical  Před rokem +1

      This will vary a lot depending on damage, what is reusable, what needs to be replaced, machined, and the budget of the customer. But generally a full rebuild similar to this could range from 1.5-5k USD. quite a range. Most rebuilders will quote the higher prices at first simply because its no possible to estimate the internal damages until the motor is fully inspected. I hope this helps.