




At the end of September she swallowed the injector tube from the RH carburetor and limped the last few miles home on three cylinders. A boroscope inspection revealed lots of mangled brass inside cyl #1 so we removed the engine & RH head to clean up & inspect for further damage. As the disassembly proceeded it became clear that this engine was in far more distress than I first realised - we found 2 loose cylinders, 3 stripped head studs, a severely blocked oil cooler, etc. Interestingly the valves were all original VW and weren't burned after 121 500 miles neither did the valve seats show any sign of recession having run on unleaded for the last 9000 miles. Anyhow, the descision was made to do a complete rebuild and thus started the very interesting - and dirty - process of completely overhauling my 1st VW engine. I would never have believed how much cleaning was involved if I hadn't done most of it myself. I recon at least 50% of the total effort is spent cleaning baked on cr@p off parts!!! Same goes for the amount of reading and research one has to do in order to understand the processes involved - and implications thereof - in making the case & heads serviceable again. I highly recommend 'How to overhaul your air-cooled VW engine' by Tom Wilson & 'How to hotrod VW engines' by Bill Fisher as everything is described in great detail. Another must have is an original VW engine manual which I was furtunate enough to obtain just before starting this job. I was also extremely priviledged to have a mentor in the person of Bill Noble (Forcecooled) who has been building VW engines since before I was around and who allowed me to assist with & learn as much as possible as the work progressed. Thanks Bill - I learnt more about VW engines in the last 2 months than I had in the preceeding 20 years!!!
The case, crank, rods & heads were sent to McDonalds in JNB for machining and as usual they did a fantastic job then the flywheel & clutch, crank, rods, pistons, fan & gen pulley went to Dynamic Balancing in Edenvale and they did a equally great job of balancing the whole lot. Bill CC'd the heads & adjusted the deck heights to give a c.r of 7.8:1 all round resulting in an engine that is both dynamicaly & volumetricaly balanced. The difference in smoothness is amazing and eventhough the engine is still stiff she just wants to rev - I have to keep reining her in!!!!
The list of parts that were replaced is about a quarter mile long, most significant being:
Reground flywheel & new LuK clutch plate
New german KS cylinders, pistons & rings
NOS VW camshaft & new Scat lifters
New AE valves & guides
New Mahle bearings
26mm Shadek oil pump & new oil pressure regulating valve
10mm head studs replaced with 8mm studs & case savers
And my personal favorite: Thermostat & cooling air control flaps replaced, checked & found serviceable
I've included a few pics for your perusal.
Regards,