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Re: Oil Pump Shafts?

To: jaboruch@netzero.com, fubog@beon.net
Subject: Re: Oil Pump Shafts?
From: WEmery7451@aol.com
Date: Sun, 18 Aug 2002 21:57:00 EDT
In a message dated 8/16/02 4:17:31 PM Pacific Daylight Time, 
jaboruch@netzero.com writes:

<< Pump rotor that failed.  The shaft up to the gear is fine.  It broke
 at the slots on the top.  Someone previously had noted that theirs
 broke due to the pin that attaches the rotor to the shaft worked its
 way out, but that was not the problem with mine.
  >>

Now that oil pumps are back in the FOT news, I am looking for opinions.  I 
pulled my several pumps off of the shelf, and tried to determine which were 
good and which might not be so good.  Two of them were bound up and obviously 
came out of engine explosions.  

Using a distributor drive shaft, some of the other pumps were free turning by 
hand throughout the entire 360 degrees.  Others would have a small amount of 
resistance at one spot, where the rotor lobes would be the closest together.  
Which situation is the better?

Putting a distributor drive shaft in an electric drill (1/2" and capable of 
running in reverse), I spun all of these oil pumps with a small amount of oil 
in their suction side.  They all spurted a little oil up through their 
discharge hole.

There is not much to read about oil pumps in both the TR-2/3 Red Book or the 
TR-4 Gray Book, except that they are supposed to be good for 200,000 miles.

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