jrsavoie
Recruit
When I removed the harmonic balancer bolt, a fair amount of oil ran out of the hole.
Is this normal?
Do I just not remember?
Is this normal?
Do I just not remember?
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Not until I find my puller and installer tools. I will probably find them much faster once I actually look for them, instead of casually keeping an eye out.You've got a leaking crankshaft seal. Fix the root cause.
Around the harmonic balancer.IIRC, there is a seal behind the HB.
There is a shaft, the seal is around the shaft.Around the harmonic balancer.
That's what I thought, but I don't remember much.The seal rides on the HB snout and the HB has a full length key way.
I have experienced this a few times.
I do not use silicone sealer on the washer or bolt head.100% it is the front crankshaft seal. Instead of the single lip seal, you can get a double lip seal and it will do a better job. Often people don’t notice the fine scratches on the crankshaft and that is the source of a new seal failure. Our friends as Speedy Sleeve have a perfect solution for it. And any machine shop can remove a Speedy Sleeve when polishing an old crank during rebuild- no problem. So if in doubt, add it.
Wanna go a step further and do a front seal extra snazzy? Send that sucker to Chris for coating it. There are seals on critical equipment that comes factory coated for a reason- it works.
About adding the silicone to HB bolt head & washer but NEVER the threads. Then tie a bucket under balancer, and a pump to push the oil back up top later! Haha. Really the right answer is replacing the seal because ya never know when the silicone on the washer fails and up to that point maybe the seal gets a full tear. It is rare but if the seal tears it will dump oil on a long trip and ruin the engine. I have seen aftermarket manuals that tell you to add silicone to the washer and bolt head but cannot recall a GM or GEP manual saying to do so.
As much as I hate oil leaks- it is better to have it leak and be noticed so that you fix it before an annoyance leak becomes an engine killer imo.
Removing and reinstalling the balancer is more effort than replacing the seal.
Most 6.5’s require a waterpump replacement half way through their lives. My process was always replacing the front seal (Speedy sleeve as needed) timing chain, waterpump, thermostat all at the same time. For professional use trucks it made sense to do new serp belt and all coolant hoses at the same time. So I start with a coolant flush.
I always used blue locktite instead of the No1 permatex.I do not use silicone sealer on the washer or bolt head.
I use No.1 Permatex. The thick gooey stuff that comes in a squeeze tube.
Also, very important. If the timing cover is still bolted to the engine, coat the OD of the seal with that No1 Permatex and also the bore that the seal is going into.
I have had oil leaks between the seal and the bore a seal presses into because I thought that enamel paint was a sealant. It is not. It seals not one thing.
But before attempting to drive that new seal into its bore, pack the spring side of the seal with grease. Do not skip this step.
If You try driving that seal into the bore without packing that spring with grease, there is a mighty huge chance that spring will bounce from its position and dangle around the shaft. Then that seal will leak oil worser than ever.
Just mistakes I have made.