I give up
- Danzig
- Posts: 4431
- Joined: Wed Aug 17, 2005 12:00 am
- Real Name: Paul File
- Location: Van Orin, Illinois
I give up
I thought I had my L-fire licked when it came to the exhaust leak at the ball socket. Nope..
New springs, nope..still leaks. Bend the loops back on the Y-pipe for a tighter seal to tighten springs..nope...still leaks.
Sled is now sitting with enough high temp silicone at the ball joint to make valve cover gaskets for 20 cars and 17 trucks. Been drying since 11 am this morning.
New springs, nope..still leaks. Bend the loops back on the Y-pipe for a tighter seal to tighten springs..nope...still leaks.
Sled is now sitting with enough high temp silicone at the ball joint to make valve cover gaskets for 20 cars and 17 trucks. Been drying since 11 am this morning.
1973 JDX8
1978 Liquifire 340
1980 Liquifire 440 CC Racer
1980 Liquifire 440
1982 Liquifire 440
"Gotta Lick It Before You Stick It"
1978 Liquifire 340
1980 Liquifire 440 CC Racer
1980 Liquifire 440
1982 Liquifire 440
"Gotta Lick It Before You Stick It"
I give up
I have faith youll get it figured out!! I think mine leaks too. I wonder if it is even possible to have leak free connection????
Eric A.
"Life is tough, but it's tougher when you're stupid" - John Wayne
"Life is tough, but it's tougher when you're stupid" - John Wayne
-
- Posts: 2965
- Joined: Thu Jul 14, 2005 12:00 am
- Real Name: Pat Scott
- Location: Southeast Pa.
I give up
Paul,
I'm assuming that you cleaned all the gas/oil residue with a degreaser such as a "brake cleaner".
I'm assuming that you cleaned all the gas/oil residue with a degreaser such as a "brake cleaner".
'76 440 cyclone
'76 440 liquifire
'78 440 Cyclone
'75 JDX8 (sold to a member here)
'78 Liquifire(CrossCountry Clone)
'80 Liquifire(sold)
'76 440 liquifire
'78 440 Cyclone
'75 JDX8 (sold to a member here)
'78 Liquifire(CrossCountry Clone)
'80 Liquifire(sold)
I give up
I wonder if you couldn't try to modify a lead donut gasket from another sled to fit the deere? I know my ZR700 I had used a real nice one there and the gasket will form to the metal and take up any space. If you couldn't make one work, maybe try changing the exhaust manifold, maybe it would be a better fit?
-
- Posts: 193
- Joined: Sat Jul 23, 2005 12:00 am
- Location: Pendleton, NY
I give up
Have you inspected everything real close to make sure there isn't a pin hole right next to the joint? just a thought....
Tim Kudla
73 JDX4
80 Spitfire
82 Trailfire 340
84 Trailfire 440
10 SnoPro 500
73 JDX4
80 Spitfire
82 Trailfire 340
84 Trailfire 440
10 SnoPro 500
- Danzig
- Posts: 4431
- Joined: Wed Aug 17, 2005 12:00 am
- Real Name: Paul File
- Location: Van Orin, Illinois
I give up
The bottom of the ball and socket is where the leak is. My clean motor looks like salt and pepper.
I blame Rainville also!!
I blame Rainville also!!
1973 JDX8
1978 Liquifire 340
1980 Liquifire 440 CC Racer
1980 Liquifire 440
1982 Liquifire 440
"Gotta Lick It Before You Stick It"
1978 Liquifire 340
1980 Liquifire 440 CC Racer
1980 Liquifire 440
1982 Liquifire 440
"Gotta Lick It Before You Stick It"
I give up
Heres an idea Paul I think the big reason for the leaks is wear on the socket and the ball. I bet if you know someone who melts lead for sinkers etc what you could do is dip the socket of the pipe in melted lead to line it maybe 1/16" thick or so it would make it leak proof. Maybe as an another option if you knew of an old time body man who did lead filling they could line the joint also this is just some thoughts off the top of my head.
- Danzig
- Posts: 4431
- Joined: Wed Aug 17, 2005 12:00 am
- Real Name: Paul File
- Location: Van Orin, Illinois
I give up
Does the joint need movement is my question?
All exhaust components are mounted on the orange rubber pads and left loose at a minimum for movement. I could weld the union solid and loosen up the muffler mounts to body even more for engine twist under loads. Is this a good and practical statement or idea?
All exhaust components are mounted on the orange rubber pads and left loose at a minimum for movement. I could weld the union solid and loosen up the muffler mounts to body even more for engine twist under loads. Is this a good and practical statement or idea?
1973 JDX8
1978 Liquifire 340
1980 Liquifire 440 CC Racer
1980 Liquifire 440
1982 Liquifire 440
"Gotta Lick It Before You Stick It"
1978 Liquifire 340
1980 Liquifire 440 CC Racer
1980 Liquifire 440
1982 Liquifire 440
"Gotta Lick It Before You Stick It"
I give up
If you weld it solid I bet your running a chance of it cracking somewhere later on.
I give up
Just a thought. What if you took a piece of carbon fiber cloth, cut a strip, put high heat silicone on one side and glue it to the flange. Just fold a little excess over the "lip" and mate the 2 surfaces back together? I've used the stuff in muffler packing before and it holds up to heat.... I think it would take up some of the gap in your flange.
- JoeRainville
- Posts: 4355
- Joined: Tue Aug 02, 2005 12:00 am
- Real Name: "John Deere Joe"
- Location: Fort Worth, Texas
- Contact:
I give up
Steve is right, its probably my fault.SKNOWCAT wrote:I'd blame it on Rainville.
Steve T.
Since he is full of hot exhaust gas, he should deffinately have a fix for you then!
Really though, high temp RTV isn't a bad idea, but I think a "donut" gasket from a Cat might be a good idea too. Are you also sure the muffer isn't plugged with a mouse nest or something?
Good Luck,
-Rainville
Honorary Tech Editor
Chuck Norris doesn't get frost bite. He bites the frost.
Chuck Norris doesn't get frost bite. He bites the frost.