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Introduction and tales of MGB woe (long)

To: british-cars@autox.team.net
Subject: Introduction and tales of MGB woe (long)
From: msw@cpsc.ucalgary.ca (Mark Williams)
Date: Tue, 21 Jun 1994 11:02:49 -0600
Hi,

        I've been lurking for a while now, but feel prompted to
        introduce myself due to a perplexing problem that I'm
        having with my '66 MGB GT.

        I bought the car a few months ago.  Not because I have this
        rose coloured vision of how good british cars are; but
        because I like the simple things in life.  I think that it
        was only natural for me, as I enjoy riding classic motorcycles,
        and have found with simple preventive maintenance they are
        as reliable as their modern counterparts.

        Anyways, on to the GT.  As I have already said, it is a '66
        MGB GT in BRG with 78,000 miles on the clock.  The engine
        had been rebuilt by a local british car dealer.  Overall the
        car was mechanically good, good interior and a 20 foot paint
        job.  There were things that needed work to bring them up to
        scratch.  It was the best all around condition GT that I'd
        seen in the last few months.  I particularily wanted a GT over
        a roadster as I intend to use it all year round.  When the
        temperature is -30C outside it is nice to have a roof over
        ones head.

        So for the next few weeks I worked on addressing what state
        the car really was in.  Who needs a social life when you have
        a british car?  I changed the oil, adjusted the carbs, topped
        up the gear box oil, adjusted the carbs, lubicated the front
        suspension, adjusted the carbs, rebalanced the front wheels,
        adjusted the carbs, reset the valve clearances.  The observant
        amoungst you might begin to notice a pattern in the work that
        I was doing on the car.

        You see I could get the carbs perfectly synchronised if I
        wanted an idle of 1500rpms.  The damn rear carb justed wanted
        to suck more than the front.  It refused to operate below
        1500rpms.  With the air filters off you can see that the height
        of the rear piston, at idle, was greater than the front by an
        1/8 of an inch or so.  No matter what I did I couldn't get the
        height of the piston to drop down.  I twisted all the twiddly
        bits I could, but it still wanted to be superior to the front
        carb.

        In the mean time I racked up a few tentative trips to the
        mountains on a favourite road of mine - discovering that if
        you have the rear tyres 3psi more than the front, it handles
        *much* better.  I stored away in the back recess of my mind
        that the front was under damped and the rear over damped which
        makes for some interesting steering wheel manouvers on bumpy
        twisty narrow roads at high speeds.  Well I wouldn't say that
        they were that high - it just feels like it in a car that is
        low to the ground.  In the twisties, a modern car driven by
        an old lady would leave me for dust (if she had balls %).

        I'd get to my destination with a grin.  The car is so much
        more fun to drive than any other car that I've owned.  I
        used it as it should be used (and as it was designed to be
        used).  It is nearly thirty, but I have little respect for
        age.

        If you are still out there reading this.  I'm sure that you
        realise that there is a punch line somewhere along the way.
        Well this is it.  One day I was tootling along (in the city)
        and started to hear a knock.  Yes the knock is definitely
        coming from the engine.  This is bad news(tm) I think.  Sure
        enough, the best advice told me that it was most likely a
        rod bearing, but could even be a main bearing.  So I did what
        any self respecting person would do.  I paniced.  I'd just
        owned the car less than a month and I'm about to do major
        surgery on it.

        There were a couple of choices - do the work myself or
        farm it out to the british car place.  My chequebook said I
        had to do it myself.  I decided that I would drop the pan
        (lifting the engine up from the front to give me enough
        clearnace to remove the front pan bolts - I used a jack
        and a block of wood under the rear pan).  Sure enough, one
        of the connecting rod's big end bearing was shot. (#1 cylinder
        for those keeping statistics on these things),

        For those of you who are contemplating doing this at home,
        I'd highly recommend it.  With the right tools and relaxed
        frame of mind, it is a straight foward job.

        The one thing I didn't know, was why it had failed?  Another
        thing that I found bothersome, was that the crank is already
        30thou undersized!  That means, I have one undersize left to go.
        (Time to look for a possible donar motor.)

        Well, this last weekend, I'd collected all the parts that I
        needed.  And set about putting all the pieces back together
        again.  I took my time and double checked everything.   Just
        to be clever, I put it all together once, sealed everything
        up and *then* decided to double check it one more time.  So
        everything came off again.  Rechecked and then put it back
        again.  Even after all this, I did not have *any* pieces left
        in the plastic tubs that I was using to store related pieces
        together, nor did I discover any tubs that I had forgotten
        about.

        When I was putting it back together, I discovered that on number
        one cylinder, the big end cap's punch marks did not line up
        with the punch marks on the connecting rod.  Well it did if
        you had the cap on backwards.  By george (or whoever the 
        previous owner was), I think I might have discovered why number
        one failed.

        After it was together, and her fluids restored, I primed the
        oil pump (which took ages) and then fired her up.  Everything
        was in order, no displace fluids appearing and no knocking.  The
        only thing is that she still idles at 1500rpms...

        So we now come to my question to you.  How can I her to idle
        at say 800rpms?  I've recentralised the jet, adjusted the
        mixture, idle screws, but the rear carb's piston is still that
        1/8inch higher.  The carbs are SUs with the remote floats if
        that helps.

                advTHANKSance

                                      ,
"A storm breaks trees,          Mark -%)
 it only bends grass."                         msw@cpsc.UCalgary.CA
           Solzhenitsyn                 ...!{uunet!ubc-cs, utai}!calgary!msw


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