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Propane for old engines [message #67051] Wed, 09 December 2009 19:39 Go to next message
ljdavick is currently offline  ljdavick   United States
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I read this on the Powered by Propane site and thought it was curious...

<http://www.poweredbypropane.net>

Talking about adding Propane to older engines:

"However, there is a small disadvantage in case of 12- 20 year old cars. Namely, the carbon deposit makes kind of a "sealing crust" from the inner side of the older engine and when it runs on propane this "crust" melts and may make a small oil leak bigger."

I know that propane will clean up a crusty engine, but I'd never thought that the crust might be serving some purpose.

Any thoughts?


Larry Davick
A Mystery Machine
1976(ish) Palm Beach
Fremont, Ca
Howell EFI + EBL + Electronic Dizzy
Re: [GMCnet] Propane for old engines [message #67056 is a reply to message #67051] Thu, 10 December 2009 00:09 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Terry Skinner is currently offline  Terry Skinner   United States
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same thing happens when changing a high time engine over to synthetic
oils. Cleans out all the carbon and sludge from the ring lands. With
any kind of luck the rings will re-seat and you are back in
business...........Terry

On Wed, Dec 9, 2009 at 5:39 PM, Larry Davick <ljdavick@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>
> I read this on the Powered by Propane site and thought it was curious...
> http://www.poweredbypropane.net
> <http://www.poweredbypropane.net>
>
> Talking about adding Propane to older engines:
>
> "However, there is a small disadvantage in case of 12- 20 year old cars. Namely, the carbon deposit makes kind of a "sealing crust" from the inner side of the older engine and when it runs on propane this "crust" melts and may make a small oil leak bigger."
>
> I know that propane will clean up a crusty engine, but I'd never thought that the crust might be serving some purpose.
>
> Any thoughts?
> --
> Larry Davick
> The Mystery Machine
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> List Information and Subscription Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist
>



--
Terry Skinner
253-686-2624
Roy. Washington
'76 GMC
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Re: Propane for old engines [message #67060 is a reply to message #67051] Thu, 10 December 2009 02:06 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Ken Burton is currently offline  Ken Burton   United States
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I just got burned by cleaning out the carbon from a cylinder. I had low compression on one cylinder. I removed the cylinder and found a broken ring. I replaced all of the rings and honed it. I also cleaned it and the piston up and removed all of the carbon that I could get to without removing the valves.

This is similar to what you might get if you switch to something that cleaned out the engine. I had reasonable compression after reassembling the engine before I initially ran it to seat the rings. After two hours of operation the compression went to almost zero. If I grabbed on the exhaust valve and wiggled it I could get the compression to raise some. You could hear the exhaust valve leaking while doing a differential compression test.

I finally had to remove the cylinder a second time which is not an easy job and it is very cold out now. The exhaust valve had impacted carbon and lead between it and the seat. After removing all of the crap from the valve and seat the valve would not seat any more. So yesterday I had to have the seat ground smooth again. I finished reassembling the cylinder today and tomorrow I might reinstall it.

My point is if I had just replaced the rings and not cleaned it up real good, the engine would probably still have run OK. It will run OK now but I sure had to go to a lot of extra work to get it there.

When switching fuels or oil that cleans out things you run the the risk of causing the same problem that I ran into. Granted this is not a GMC engine but the basics are the same.



Ken Burton - N9KB
76 Palm Beach
Hebron, Indiana
Re: [GMCnet] Propane for old engines [message #67100 is a reply to message #67060] Thu, 10 December 2009 13:09 Go to previous messageGo to next message
ljdavick is currently offline  ljdavick   United States
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I read the earlier post about adding propane to the Onan with great interest. I thought it might help to run it off of propane intermittently to clean it out. Now I'm wondering if this could kill it!

That could be a good thing, except for the wallet.

Larry Davick
The Mystery Machine
In Sunny but FREEZING California
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Larry Davick
A Mystery Machine
1976(ish) Palm Beach
Fremont, Ca
Howell EFI + EBL + Electronic Dizzy
Re: Propane for old engines [message #67126 is a reply to message #67051] Thu, 10 December 2009 17:02 Go to previous messageGo to next message
George Beckman is currently offline  George Beckman   United States
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ljdavick wrote on Wed, 09 December 2009 17:39



Talking about adding Propane to older engines:

"However, there is a small disadvantage in case of 12- 20 year old cars. Namely, the carbon deposit makes kind of a "sealing crust" from the inner side of the older engine and when it runs on propane this "crust" melts and may make a small oil leak bigger."

Any thoughts?


I drive a '37 Ford with a '38 Flathead engine. At about 20K miles on a rebuilt engine, I switched it to propane. Best thing I have ever done. All the horror stories have failed to manifest them selves. I have about 35K on the engine. It burns no oil. The oil stays so much cleaner and flatheads are not known for their sanitary oil. I have to really remember to change it even though it looks great. Starts well. Runs well. I have noticed that I have to change the spark plugs about every 10K. I have electronic ignition and the plugs look perfect, but it starts to miss occasionally and becomes a little harder to start. (Too bad the propane doesn't help keep the engine's outside cleaner.)

http://www.pggp.com/37ford.htm

Since those pictures, I have added Hotrod Air heating an AC. I haven't driven it since yesterday.


'74 Eleganza, SE, Howell + EBL
Best Wishes,
George
Re: [GMCnet] Propane for old engines [message #67129 is a reply to message #67126] Thu, 10 December 2009 17:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
ljdavick is currently offline  ljdavick   United States
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That's a good looking pickup truck. Would make an excellent towd, no?

Larry Davick
The Mystery Machine

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Larry Davick
A Mystery Machine
1976(ish) Palm Beach
Fremont, Ca
Howell EFI + EBL + Electronic Dizzy
Re: Propane for old engines [message #67136 is a reply to message #67051] Thu, 10 December 2009 19:24 Go to previous message
Matt Colie is currently offline  Matt Colie   United States
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ljdavick wrote on Wed, 09 December 2009 20:39

I read this on the Powered by Propane site and thought it was curious...
<a href="http://www.poweredbypropane.net" target="_blank"></a>
<http://www.poweredbypropane.net>

Talking about adding Propane to older engines:

"However, there is a small disadvantage in case of 12- 20 year old cars. Namely, the carbon deposit makes kind of a "sealing crust" from the inner side of the older engine and when it runs on propane this "crust" melts and may make a small oil leak bigger."

I know that propane will clean up a crusty engine, but I'd never thought that the crust might be serving some purpose.

Any thoughts?

Larry,

It isn't.

The changes in combustion with propane are considerable. Very different pressures and temperatures can be created. The only place that gets any direct grief is the combustion seal in the head gasket. I got more than a few claims that a gasket failed when the engine was switched to propane, but all of the examples that I saw had failed before the switch and had been running failed for some time (usually the result of a fastener issue). The only other factor is that the engine may produce higher cylinder pressures and this will cause the joints to work and thus leak more.

Aftermarket warranty is really interesting on occasion.

Matt


Matt & Mary Colie - Chaumière -'73 Glacier 23 - Members GMCMI, GMCGL, GMCES
Electronically Controlled Quiet Engine Cooling Fan with OE Rear Drum Brakes with Applied Control Arms
SE Michigan - Near DTW - Twixt A2 and Detroit
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