waynehartwig said:Just what super gripper said, but instead of the oils he mentioned, I would either use diesel or atf. And I would put that in and let it soak at least overnight before trying again. It sounds like the rings have rusted themselves into the cylinder walls. If you force it, you can bust a ring, which would then require you to rebuild the motor!
All of this assuming it was a good running motor 3 years ago.... If it was just rebuilt, then I would make sure the valve timing is correct, or you might have a valve open stopping the pistons.
Also, how are you trying to turn the motor over? By hand or with the starter? If that is a fresh built motor, it will be tight, and weak starters and batteries won't turn over a tight motor. When he built it, did he try to turn it over on the engine stand? After assembling the rotating assembly?? Try using a socket on the front pulley, pull the plugs, and see if you can turn the motor over by hand. Try turning it backwards if you can't go forward.
waynehartwig said:A valve in the chamber WILL stop a piston - or break it or the valve!....
waynehartwig said:A valve in the chamber WILL stop a piston - or break it or the valve!
If this things been sitting since November, as a freshly built motor, there is most likely no lubrication in the cylinder walls and the rings have froze. Put a couple of squirts of ATF in each cylinder and let it sit for a day and come back to it. If it doesn't do it, do it again. Being a 10:1 motor doesn't matter with the plugs out. That motor still should spin over by hand, so spinning the crank bolt off shouldn't be a problem. If it is, then the motor is still bound up. Don't worry about breaking it, it should be around 110 FtLbs anyway. But you shouldn't need the 3' breaker bar either.
74highboy said:it would spin till we put the tranny on it
waynehartwig said:My mistake, I thought the 68 GTO only had the 400's in them. But you validated my point, that you weren't even talking about a 400. A 428 can have a piston valve engagement if not timed correctly. Otherwise why would they clearance the pistons if it can't?
So my original comments on checking the valve timing still stands. But if this motor turned over back in November, and has just been sitting since, chances are better that you have seized rings.
waynehartwig said:Harkinoff, are you picking fights with me, or are we trying to help this guy fix his GTO? Because it seems like you are trying to start a pissing match. QUOTE]
Just defending the fact that you are wrong and steering the dude in the wrong direction by even mentioning the possibility of a valve causing motor locking in this circumstance. This is not some new Jap motor, this is good ole American iron here, SO YES, I guess I'm having a pissing match with you....
If this engine was built for a supercharger it would have less compression than what was original, so the possibility of a pop up piston hitting a valve would even be even lesssssssss likely. The only way this engine would touch a valve is at very high RPM's when metals begin to expand or fatigue, besides just having a valve let loose or a piston come apart.. And the part on helping this guy, I already stated as well as others as what to do and what is MOST likely the problem..