Yes, that's right, today we did actual automotive stuff instead of just more setup on the VAB.Today's mini-project was sort of logistical. We only have one engine stand, and it's had a bare Chevrolet V8 engine block on it for years, waiting to be used as the core of a new engine build for the Impala. However! That block needs to go away to a machine shop to be tested and overhauled before the build can begin, and in the meantime, we've had an '80s 305 with a cracked block kicking around for ages that we wanted to strip for usable parts.
So now that we've got the overhead crane set up, we had an easy way to remove the project block from the stand...

(Note the festive pink and white residue from when we checked it for cracks ourselves, long long ago. It's the party block!)
... and replace it with the scrap engine.

The engine stand makes this kind of work a lot easier, because you can rotate the engine on its long axis and work on it upside down, or even on its side if need be.
First order of business was to pull off the cylinder heads, which we can probably clean up and use for something else.


As an aside, getting that harmonic balancer off the front of the crankshaft was a big pain in the butt! We broke a puller and had to build another one in a cave with a box of scraps.
I didn't have a chance to get many photos of the process itself, since (for once) I was doing most of the wrenching myself, and my hands were too oily to be messing around with my phone.
Eventually, though, we got the block fully stripped.

Note the one mismatched bolt on the #1 main bearing cap, far right. That's a little bigger than the others. Years and years ago, Dad bought this engine as a rebuilt unit from Western Auto (which should tell some of you how long ago that was), and it never quite ran right. Eventually he tore it apart and discovered that that particular main bearing bolt had been overtightened and the hole cracked. He tried to fix it by drilling it oversize and putting that bolt in it, but it didn't really work - hence why we're scrapping the block.
Still, there's a lot of stuff in there that's perfectly good, low-mileage rebuilt parts, which should have value to someone. Not us, because we're not building a 305, but someone.

So, while the block is going to the scrapper's at some point, the rest of this stuff will probably bring a few bucks if we can figure out where to list it. '80s cars are becoming popular collectibles these days, somehow, so someone out there somewhere is probably building a 305 and would love to have a recently ground crankshaft with a set of clean .030-over main bearings, good pistons with fresh rings, and a mildly spicy cam.
Anyway, not the most exciting day's work in terms of the full project, but an important step nonetheless. Also a valuable refresher for me; I know how these engines work from experiences decades ago, a lot of reading, and Car Mechanic Sim, but it's been a long time since I did any work on one with my actual hands.
For the curious, the road map for the project engines goes something like this:
1) Have the project block (the pink one above) professionally checked and, if it passes, refurbished by a proper engine machine shop.
2) Use it as the basis for a 327-cubic-inch engine with some fairly mild performance mods. (Unlike the later 305, which is pretty well locked into that displacement, this particular block casting can be used for a few different-size engines depending on the crank and pistons you put in it. We think it was originally built as a 350, back in the day.)
3) Pull the 283-cubic-inch engine that's in the Impala now and replace it with the 327. (It's not the car's original engine anyway, so what the heck.)
4) Overhaul the 283 and put it in Angus, which currently doesn't have any engine in it at all.
Transmissions to be determined, though most likely we'll leave the four-speed manual that's currently in the Impala in place and put some sort of automatic in the truck. (Probably a three-speed; the GM automatics with more gears than that didn't come along until after everything became too computerized to stick into a 1966 without a lot of screwing around.)
So, there you go. Actual wrenching has happened in the VAB at last. More to come!
--G.
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Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.