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I recently bought a 47 ford pickup, it has a 6cyl flathead. I have been try'n to figure out what is going on, the engine runs well and i can drive it. I was trying to do some work on the GM carb that was on it...and after starting it up...it dumped alot of oil/gas all over the garage floor from what looks like an overflow tube on the passenger side of the block. What could have caused this? Is this normal? Any idea how to fix this? Thanks for the help in advance.
Sounds to me like you dumped that stuff out of the crankcase breathers road draft tube. What caused it I would guess is too rich a mixture, washing the oil
off the cylinder walls resulting in fuel passing into the crankcase. Smell the oil, does it smell like gas? The Rochester carb may work if jetted correctly and set up properly, I would be looking for an alternative.
Thanks Alot....that makes sense. When I changed the oil last weekend it was like 75 % Gas....kinda scared me a bit. Looks like I'm either gonna have to rebuild the Carb or look for a Holly 94 I think to go on it instead. Thanks again for the Info
If you've got that much fuel in the crankcase it could be the fuel pump. I not up on the 6's but the V8's have a tendency for the diaphragm in the pump to rupture and most of the gas goes into the crankcase. Not good for anything that needs oil to make it slippery.
Drain the case immediately, refill with oil, disconnect the fuel line and turn it over to re-lube your bearings. Probably should do another oil change after that.
I would agree with mtflat here. I don't think this problem was limited to the V8 flatheads. I saw this same problem with a 70s vintage 351M. The fellow asked me to see how hard it would be to replace his rear engine seal because it was starting to leak on his driveway (he also wanted an oil change at that time and I filled up my 5 quart oil pan, and emptied and filled it 1/2 way again). Since the oil was mostly all gas I went after the pump. It turned out that there was a port on the side of the fuel pump that would normally dump the gas to the ground but it had plugged and was dumping straight to the crankcase.
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