Ford Mustang Forums banner
1 - 20 of 23 Posts

· Registered
Joined
·
28 Posts
Discussion Starter · #1 ·
Hello everyone, the other day I was driving my 1991 GT and i noticed loss in oil pressure and heard lots of valve lash from the lack of oil in the lifters, so today in an empty parking lot where got it towed to with almost no tools i dropped the steering rack, the oil pan and the oil pump without taking out or jacking up the motor. I took out the old oil pump and it was locked and the shaft was twisted until it snapped. I finished the job and put everything back together and I don’t have the right equipment to prime the oil pump can i just start the motor to prime it??
 

· Registered
Joined
·
3,008 Posts
Hello everyone, the other day I was driving my 1991 GT and i noticed loss in oil pressure and heard lots of valve lash from the lack of oil in the lifters, so today in an empty parking lot where got it towed to with almost no tools i dropped the steering rack, the oil pan and the oil pump without taking out or jacking up the motor. I took out the old oil pump and it was locked and the shaft was twisted until it snapped. I finished the job and put everything back together and I don’t have the right equipment to prime the oil pump can i just start the motor to prime it??
No, you should prime it. Unless you rev it up you wont have enough suction to pull oil into the pump but youll be revving is so long and so high youll likely cause bearing damage. With that said, you dont need any special tools. You need to make sure you installed a new driveshaft with the retainer facing upward towards the distributor FYI. All you need is a drill, the correct 1/4 drive socket that fits over the drive shaft and enough extensions to reach the drive shaft. I always use electrical tape to wrap the socket and the extension so there is no chance of the socket falling off . You turn the shaft the same direction that the distributor turns which is counter clockwise.
 
  • Like
Reactions: EvilGooses

· Registered
Joined
·
4,129 Posts
why did it lock up? and with almost no tools and not jacking up the engine you were able to drop the pan, loosen the pump bolts, remove the pump, and reverse the procedure? Kinda unbelievable.
Or did you lower the k member?
 

· Registered
Joined
·
3,008 Posts
you can get an oil pump to push oil to all rocker arms with just a ratchet. ratchet, extension and a socket (Forgot size).
Not in my experience.
 
  • Like
Reactions: stangjumper

· Registered
Joined
·
8,681 Posts
Tape a 1/4 deep socket on a drill or impact driver. Put in reverse. Run for a good 20-30 seconds until you feel it get heavy with load. Once you’ve done that install distributor and go home. Not like the engine has been sitting for 20 years.

I applaud your expert level of roadkill side of the road fix. That’s not an easy thing at all.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
443 Posts
I applaud your expert level of roadkill side of the road fix. That’s not an easy thing at all.
I was going to say, that is some incredible amount of work in a parking lot on the roadside with limited tools. I hope no damage was done to the engine when the pump failed.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
3,008 Posts
Try it and then answer.
Ive tried it using a speed driver. It doesnt work. An engine idling at 800 rpm cant produce enough suction to lift oil into an unprimed pump. A drill running at high speed takes 20 to 30 seconds to create enough suction to get oil into the pump but somehow a turning a ratchet by hand creates enough suction to prime it? Nope, not in my experience. The only time a ratchet might work is if the pump is already primed.
 
  • Like
Reactions: EvilGooses

· Registered
Joined
·
4,234 Posts
Ive tried it using a speed driver. It doesnt work. An engine idling at 800 rpm cant produce enough suction to lift oil into an unprimed pump. A drill running at high speed takes 20 to 30 seconds to create enough suction to get oil into the pump but somehow a turning a ratchet by hand creates enough suction to prime it? Nope, not in my experience. The only time a ratchet might work is if the pump is already primed.
I always install the oil pump primed, thought you had to, guess not.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
443 Posts
disconnect the coil and crank it for about 10 seconds at time a few times as well in a pinch
Its not a new engine that all components have been soaked in oil and / or pre-treated with assembly lube, it is an engine that has been run dry and there may already be some damage. I would suggest the drill method to get some oil to all areas before even cranking.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
790 Posts
I always use a drill clamped onto an old distributor shaft and would not feel good about trying that with a ratchet. I just don't see how the oil is going to get in there alright and then lube the engine so it doesn't have a dry start.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
3,008 Posts
I always install the oil pump primed, thought you had to, guess not.
Ive seen people take the bottom/back plate off and pack the gears with Vaseline since its petroleum based to get a pump to pick up fluid faster. I learned that trick from a subaru guy who would do it on every oil pump he changed. They always seemed to start right up and pick up fluid for him. I think in those cases just starting the car will pull oil up into the pump fairly quickly on a SBF but I personally have never tried it since just using a drill has always worked for me.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
28 Posts
Discussion Starter · #16 ·
Next day I have off ill take out the distributor and buy a drill and the correct extensioand socket to spin the oil pump. but could it be possible that the oil pump shaft missed the hole to the distributor? The surface from the oil pump to the block are flush but I’m just wondering…
 
1 - 20 of 23 Posts
Top