hoeser
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2006
- Messages
- 253
I am currently rebuilding my 1984 Evinrude 140 Crossflow V4 and I have run into an issue after joining the crankcase halves. I carefully aligned all the connecting rod caps, installed new seals on the upper and lower crankcase heads and joined the two halves together using gel seal.
After hammering in my taper pins, tightening the crankcase screws to torque, and also tightening the crankhead screws both upper and lower to torque I installed my flywheel and checked for binding, there was virtually no resistance and I was quite pleased with how smooth it was turning. The only thing I had left to do was tighten the 4 screws which retain the lower crankshaft bearing retainer plate. These were already installed but only finger tight. After tightening them to a modest 3 or 4lb I checked for binding again before going up to the manual-suggested 84-120in/lb of torque. At this point there was enough resistance on the crankshaft that I couldn't really turn it easily anymore even using both hands.
I have picked my brain on this one for a while now but I can't figure out why the plate is causing the crankshaft to bind. Can you offer any ideas? I'm 99.9% sure I am using the correct screws for the plate - they are about 1.5" in length, have lock washers and are a finer thread than most of the screws in use on the rest of the engine.
Hope you experts can help me out on this. Thanks in advance.
-Dave
After hammering in my taper pins, tightening the crankcase screws to torque, and also tightening the crankhead screws both upper and lower to torque I installed my flywheel and checked for binding, there was virtually no resistance and I was quite pleased with how smooth it was turning. The only thing I had left to do was tighten the 4 screws which retain the lower crankshaft bearing retainer plate. These were already installed but only finger tight. After tightening them to a modest 3 or 4lb I checked for binding again before going up to the manual-suggested 84-120in/lb of torque. At this point there was enough resistance on the crankshaft that I couldn't really turn it easily anymore even using both hands.
I have picked my brain on this one for a while now but I can't figure out why the plate is causing the crankshaft to bind. Can you offer any ideas? I'm 99.9% sure I am using the correct screws for the plate - they are about 1.5" in length, have lock washers and are a finer thread than most of the screws in use on the rest of the engine.
Hope you experts can help me out on this. Thanks in advance.
-Dave