So Joe dropped off the little 63 American yesterday, and hauled off the 73 Hornet parts car. We discovered one of those little tiny surprises... I'd swiped the rear leaf spring retainer plates/lower shock mounts, so Joe brought a pair from his 77 Hornet (V8). They didn't fit. Two left shoes! 73, both shocks are in front of the axle. 77, V8 anyways, one fore one aft. Go figure. The little American didn't want to run, but we chugged it off the trailer into it's parking spot anyways. The Hornet went on to the trailer without any trouble. So today I thought I'd get the American to run well enough to get to the car wash to squirt all the dirt out of it. The car was very, very dirty, looks like the windows were left open for some time, the door panels are all unrecoverably trashed. I stripped out the non-factory carpeting and the tar paper, cleaned out the trunk, removed the rear seats etc. Would not idle, and had a bad chug-chug, clearly cylinders not running, lots of valve clatter, then it stopped running at all -- out of gas! Got gas, swapped the old carb for the new one that came-with, fixed about 20 CFM of vacuum leaks (rotted hoses, stuck-open PCV plugged for now). Ran but chug-chug. Big radiator leak (nicked tube). Cleaned it wiped on 5-minute JB Weld, filled with water, left the cap loose. Good enough for eval purposes. What with all the warnings on head bolt torque (thanks Frank!!!) I pulled the valve cover off, and found four pushrods fell out. Oops. One was bent badly, one slightly. But many of the ones remaining were really loose, so it looks like that valves hadn't been adjusted in a decade. Some old pushrods came-with, so I cleaned two up swapped them in, hoping that the bent ones got that way when they fell out. Glad I did -- that's all that it was. I spent 20 minutes getting cold static valve lash "about right", it ran and idled (never even adjusted the NOS carb!), I got all the valves dialed in and it now runs like a watch. Idles at 525 RPM. The head bolts were under 40 ft/lbs loose! Damn glad I torqued before driving it at all. I hope no damage was done in the past. The oil has no sign of water, so that's good. I think I dodged a bullet here. (Pulling the valve cover, torquing the head bolts and adjusting the valves took under 45 minutes. It's no big deal at all.) So I got it to the car wash OK, lightened it about 20 pounds of dirt. I dunno, but this car seems peppy. It's not V8, but it gets out of it's own way just fine, except for the gear stirring it'll be fine in LA street traffic. Filled the gas tank then drove home. Total trip about 5 miles. Back in the yard, engine hot, wit hthe PCV system plugged 'til I get a batch of hoses and a new valve, there's just about zero ring-blow-by out the oil filler neck! That's a pleasant surprise. The block is unpainted with a REBUILT xxxx POWER-PAK tag; the head is green; the valve cover is read (repainted once). So it's definitely had work. The pushrods were rusty, that's bad, so it probably sat with condensation. That's not a good sign for the bottom end, but it's next trip is to the local garage for an oil change; then I'll Sea-Foam with that and change again at 500 - 1000 miles. For this motor I suppose I should think about zinc oil additives. So needless to say I'm totally happy with this car. I think I found my calling with this old six. I'd never done one before, and I know I could dial in the valves by ear and get them all correct. Thanks Joe, for saving TWO cars from the crusher -- this little American, originally destined to be someone's parts car, and the car I parted out that will be reassembled. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list