I got my new 195.6 OHV running, but not without problems. I replaced the oil pressure relief spring with a shorter/softer one, refilled etc, and within 5 seconds puked oil out the same place (pushed out the oil filter gasket). Then I tried the "other" plunger. Same thing. Then I put in the shortest, softest spring, and ... it held. Thing is, it ruined my new oil pressure gauge within the first 5 SECONDS! So I don't know what the operating pressure is, now; 0 psi shows as 30 or so, but I eyeballed it by assuming that if it's not pegged (and stays intact) I'm OK... there is certainly enough oil pressure for the cast iron to be happy. Since I hadn't tuned it or adjusted the valves it didn't idle so I kept it varying around 1500 rpm, got it warmed up, the oil pressure dropped accordingly. I set the valves with the engine hot and not running (close enough for now) I had 'em all too tight, twisted the distrib and idle mixture and it idles roughly at 700 rpm with 18 inHg vacuum, so "good enough" for now. (The carb is new out of the box.) Ran it for probably 30 - 40 minutes. Next time I'll retorque the head then tune up to spec. I'm a little worried about the oiling still. My working assumption for the design was, the oil pump cannot deliver more oil than the relief valve can bleed off. I'm wondering if there are more restrictions "upstream" of the main gallery (hose, filter) that allows substantially more than the relief pressure to build. I was assuming the "head" would be 2 - 5 psi, but that even 20 - 30 psi would be OK. There are two 90 fittings in the system, but the rest are 180 degrees, and the hose is 1/2", where the block oil ports are 1/4" to 5/16". I know that 90's can be very restrictive. I could easily replace them with 180's. The 100psi gauge PINNED and bent in seconds; that's not just "a few psi" high! It bugs me that I have four 195.6 OHV relief springs and all four are different. The (wrong) plunger and tall spring I got from Galvin's. The softest one did work however, and it was the one that came out of this engine. Luckily it was just a $20 Sunpro gauge from Pep Boys. Two of the springs are 23 turns, two are 21 turns. All exactly the same design and diameter within .001", but all different lengths. Three of them are used, one new. I did not measure the exact length of the spring installed, but it's trivial to pull and measure, and I will be doing that. I think I will also cobble up a bench spring compressor scale so I can actually measure these things. So Friday I will buy YET ANOTHER Pep Boys gauge, and now that it idles, I can check rpm vs. pressure and check that with the current spring that it's not going over spec. So it could be one of the following: * Simply the wrong spring and plunger, hence problem solved now. * Extraordinarily high upstream pressure even with a reasonable relief pressure. But it seems unlikely I did any damage the first time, since the "big leak" from the popped filter gasket simply relieves pressure, it doesn't drop it to zero. Whew! What a f*** relief!! Messy driveway though. I had a lot of other typical tiny under-hood problems (wrong wire to fan, fan polarity backwards, etc) nothing serious, just typical trivia. Man, this 195.6 OHV is a mess of little mysteries. Hopefully I'll get to sort it out without blowing it up. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://list.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list-amc-list.com/attachments/20100503/370651e0/attachment.htm> _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com