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Pistons Are Rusted Stuck.

Discussion in 'Early CJ5 and CJ6 Tech' started by Rory Schiffbauer, Dec 19, 2022.

  1. Rory Schiffbauer

    Rory Schiffbauer New Member

    Got this 68 CJ5 that’s been sitting in a field for 35 years. Got the engine out and mostly disassembled but can’t get the pistons unstuck to remove them. Tried a number of solvents. What works best?
     
  2. Warloch

    Warloch Did you say Flattie??? Staff Member

    Mix of Diesel, ATF, and MMO is what we used to unstick pistons in old tractors. Would soak from the top, roll the engine over on the stand after a week and soak the other side. Others may have better ideas.
     
    Ol Fogie and dozerjim like this.
  3. 73 cj5

    73 cj5 Not ready for the junkyard yet

    I made a piston driver just for this.

    [​IMG]
     
  4. nickmil

    nickmil In mothballs.

    Soaking with a mix like Warloch said works well. PB Blaster, Zep Super Penetrant, etc. works pretty well too. Soaking and patience and more soaking is key. Some force on the pistons with a driver will most likely be necessary. A strong hardwood block of wood works well here.
     
    Ol Fogie and dozerjim like this.
  5. Dave Deyton

    Dave Deyton Member

    I made a mix of ATF, Diesel Fuel, and Marvel Mystery Oil just what I had on hand. Time is your friend. I let it sit with a pan underneath. That took a week. When it filtered through, I picked up the pan and put it back through. One piston would not free up.
    Cut a round piece of plywood and beat it back and forth with a piece of 2X4. Still couldn't get it out.

    Finally got some dry ice and packed the cylinder with it and then was able to drive it out.

    Took a while but I was more stubborn than that engine.
    Still have to put it all together.


    Dave
     
  6. Rory Schiffbauer

    Rory Schiffbauer New Member

    Thanks for the posts. Guess I’ll have to learn some patience!
     
    Alan28 likes this.
  7. PeteL

    PeteL If it wasn't for physics, and law enforcement... 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    My dad helped me once with this, and besides oil, he used very hot water to fill the cooling passages. Then a piece of wood in the bore, and a sledgehammer. It worked.
     
  8. Rory Schiffbauer

    Rory Schiffbauer New Member

    I like the sledge hammer idea. I’ll try with wood first though.
     
  9. Oldpappy

    Oldpappy A.C. Fults - Curmudgeon at large 2022 Sponsor

    Freed up a lot of stuck engines using Marvel Mystery Oil, sometimes kerosene mixed with automatic transmission fluid. Pour some in and let it soak a few days or a week, then I use a piece of hardwood, mine is a chunk of hickory, and a small sledge hammer. I give each piston a few whacks every few days which usually always frees them up, but a couple of times I have had to use an air impact hammer. Pistons are usually toast anyway.
     
    Ol Fogie and dozerjim like this.
  10. Dave Deyton

    Dave Deyton Member

    I got it freed up with a round piece of plywood, a piece of 2X4 and a small sledge hammer. Didn't want to score the cylinder.
    Read an article of a guy restoring an old WWI truck. He drilled into the pistons since it had been sitting outside for 70 years then driving them out collapsing them.
    It just takes patience. I would pour the mixture over the cylinders at night, in the morning before I left for work and at night after I got home.
    Took more than a week but I got it free.


    Dave
     
  11. PeteL

    PeteL If it wasn't for physics, and law enforcement... 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Don't strike the piston directly with a sledgehammer! Use a block of wood in the bore, strike the wood. And use reasonable care with the force applied...

    In my case the pistons were actually cast iron, in a 1925 Ford.
     
  12. dozerjim

    dozerjim Member

    all of the above, and my drive was a piece of white oak turned just under piston diameter and cut a con cave in the end so most of the force was on the outside of the piston....patience and lots of soaking, never tried it but like the idea of filling water jacket with hot water
     
    Ol Fogie likes this.
  13. garage gnome

    garage gnome ECJ5 welder

    If they are aluminum pistons, just smash them out. I've had to do that several times. On my antique engines with cast pistons, a block of wood and a hammer will do.
     
    Ol Fogie likes this.
  14. Dave Deyton

    Dave Deyton Member

    Soaking the piston got it free.
    Dry ice got it to drive out the bottom of the engine.

    Dave
     
    Ol Fogie and dozerjim like this.
  15. Deaner70

    Deaner70 Member

    Kroil is your friend
     
    kenb likes this.
  16. CHUGALUG

    CHUGALUG Member

    If they are stuck that hard your going to need to bore the cylinders out anyway no need to be delicate
     
  17. vtxtasy

    vtxtasy oldbee 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor

    Not sure what engine you have. Had a stuck engine once that standing on a wrench with a 3 foot extension would not turn. Thought the
    crank bolt would strip or round off. Soaked with everything including Seafoam. Hit each cylinder with some air every few days to to coat
    around the cylinders. An adapter from my air hose to a spark plug hole worked for me, but the heads were still on. I was amazed what
    180 psi would do.
     
  18. Rory Schiffbauer

    Rory Schiffbauer New Member

    Thanks all. Got them all unstuck and you're right, I'll have to have the block bored and cleaned anyway. No cheap fixes here. I'll have to totally overhaul.
     
    Alan28, Dave Deyton and Fireball like this.
  19. amboynut

    amboynut Member

    You don't mention the engine, but assuming 3.5" bore each piston has 9.62 square inches of surface area. 180 psi X 9.62 = 1732 lbs of pressure on the piston!
    Does your compressor really produce 180 psi?
     
  20. vtxtasy

    vtxtasy oldbee 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor

    Made me look! Yes 180PSI. It is a 5hp 2-stage with a 60 gallon tank. It is a Sanborn model with a 200PSI working limit. Pressure relief set at 200PSI to open and 152 PSI to close. One of my better
    purchases picked up from Price Club almost 40 years ago. Back when Price Club carried Armstrong Tru-Trac tires. Beat the crap out it. Plumbed my shop to have air where needed and located in my
    storage room to keep the noise level down. I change the oil periodically and replaced the motor bearings once. I believe the belts are original unless I did them with the bearing change. Don't really
    remember as I have changed thousand of belts over the years and can't remember all of them. The oil looks a little low, so thanks for making me look! I did a/c and refrigeration and controls for 40
    years. Repairs and installation from water coolers, ice machines, block ice plants for ice carvings, aircraft ground units, boilers, auto, cascade systems to -180 degrees, warehouses that semis could drive into,
    cooling towers, 200 ton chillers and more.
    If it cooled I worked on it day or night as product would go bad if too warm. Some systems run at 450PSI. I have 2000PSI nitrogen tanks used for pressure testing lines and systems.

    The engine was a 225 V6 bored .060 making the bore 3.810. Got it running, then went ahead and put a good cross hatch hone job, gapped and replaced the rings. This is just under the 3.820
    that the 231 oddfire uses and has me questioning how much the 225 can be bored. I also have brain that never really turns off and stayed up late to catch up on "Yellowstone" and "1923".
    I highly recommend both and they are written by Taylor Sheridan who had a bit part as a sheriff on "Sons OF Anarchy". Never was a Cole Hauser fan but he does a great job as Rip.

    So, 1732 PSI on a piston. What do you imagine the explosions happening in a cylinder produce and do you have any other thoughts the idea for freeing a stuck engine? I felt I was running
    out of options with out doing major damage and wanted to be sure the engine was salvageable before moving forward. TLDR.