I got the new cam in today on my build and I thought it would be easy to scrape off the old timing cover gasket with a razor but after a few hours my hands have given up. Is there any trick to removing the old gasket that's glued to the block?
Im going to have to be doing mine soon i have a small leak coming from a worn gasket. Not looking forward to it.
Im going to have to be doing mine soon i have a small leak coming from a worn gasket. Not looking forward to it.
I don't have an air compressor so I might be picking one up soon...here's how you do get it done if you have one...
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lM7IgqMAiA[/media]
Still wanting to know alternate solutions...
Where did you ge the 3M yellow pad from?
Yea I've used those pads or the green colored ones on helicopters to clean off the gunk, but I don't know where the company got them from.
That looks pretty awesome! I have a large Craftsman compressor and a die grinder, so I'll give that option a chance next time.
I purchased a bunch of those ROLOC discs from my local NAPA, they work great but they're pretty aggressive. Be careful with these on the timing cover gasket areas as you can easily scrape off more material than you bargained for. I ended up using a exacto knife and razor blade (per Tator). Took 4 beers to get through it but no nicks, scratches or gouges.
I spent about 2 hours last night with a blade and it wasn't got probably 10% done. The gasket is stuck on there bad and it's not just pieces but the whole thing. I didn't have to take my motor out for the cam swap or else I would've just had the machine shop bake the block...
My water pump gasket was this bad too. I soaked it in Permatex gasket remover, scraped, soaked, scraped some more. I hope I never have to do that again.
I don't have an air compressor so I might be picking one up soon...here's how you do get it done if you have one...
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lM7IgqMAiA[/media]
Still wanting to know alternate solutions...