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Posted

Ahhh....  The infamous water tube!

Posted

Those buggars can literally take DAYS to get out!

Posted

Bluefox............you sure thats all of it?............looks a little by me.........andyd

Posted

He may have to keep digging...

Posted
10 hours ago, Andydodge said:

Bluefox............you sure thats all of it?............looks a little by me.........andyd

jep, not much more came out.... it was scraped, we did a gynocologist like investigation and it looks clean and free... The new tube goes fluently in exept for the last 5 cm but we haven't tapped on it yet. First I am doing some test on how to safely remove rust (and I make good progress...) and how to flush the engine without the waterpump and radiator(s). We will most certainly circulate from the outlet on the bottom of the engine (have to find a tap valve that will fit) to the outlet to the heater valve. Let the stuff circulate for a few hours, close the radiator valve and then circulate over the thermostat housing. Also will try to change flow directions and removing some accesible freeze plugs to check. If that won't give a clean block I don't know. At the end... I am driving in Belgium and not in Arizona...  

cheers Plymouth mates and keep tasting the Belgian Beers!!!

curahee!!!!!

Posted

you are flushing so remove the thermostat and put the cover back on, install the pump and run....you will be supplying fresh water all the time...no biggy on a bit of a leak at the gasket surfaces during the flush process...it is a pain to remove the lower core plugs but will result in better ability to clean the crud from the block.  DO prevent the crud from returning to the radiator by allowing the upper hose to spill upon the ground when flushing.  Match the flow of your water hose in to that of the upper hose output while maintaining a almost full radiator at all time of flow.  Racing the engine will interfere with this exchange rate...keep the speed constant...when flushing the heater coil, be careful to flow and not pressurize....at the age of this unit...you wish not to blow any joint that has been compromised by age...

Posted (edited)

at this moment the radiator is not mounted and the water pump is new. so I will install an open circulation so I can have no presure build up en fill from the bottom...

 

here under the derusting test with an old steel knife and some bolts that I had been laying in the garden for ages....

image.png.ea9aa638ec962ccee10f2d7239217e65.png

Edited by bluefoxamazone
Posted

When I rebuilt my truck engine, I used a high powered steam cleaner, removed the freeze plugs and spent two hrs on that block. Then I tried to pull the tube, I tried all kinds of ways to no avail, so a perfect novice, I made a long slender spear and worked that all the way in, then I made a puller with a sharp strong end and found all the bottom openings, cleaned them and tried to pull it out. No success.

 

Then I looked down that tube with a very bright flashlight and saw all was nice and clean.  So frustrated and tired I made certain the tubes' open end was like a funnel so the water had to flow through it, put the water pump back on and now have driven it for five years and it never runs hot, temp usually at 160. 

 

The tube on my '53 suburban came out nice and easy and was in quite good shape, I put in a new tube anyway. 

Posted

My tube was also in good shape but, since I had a new tube that I had already purchased I went ahead and installed the new one. If I hadn’t had the new tube I would have used the old tube over, it had a few light pits but is still in very good shape.

Posted

The machinist that rebuilt my engine 11 years ago found a BRASS tube for my 23 inch block . The tube was so oxidized that he had to sand it a little to see the brass . He got it from his  friend that buys and sells the old mopar parts . 

Posted

Canadian cars all seem to have had brass distribution tubes. I personally have never seen a steel one in a Canadian engine. I have pulled lots of brass ones and they come out easily and are always reuseable. All are for the 25" block as that is all that went into Canadian cars and trucks from 1938 onward.

Posted

I think this was still the original tube from 1954. You see what is left after all these years (propably plain water and not modern cooling fluid with rust inhibiter and oxygen barier) I will fill 'r up with modern fluid....

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