โSep-21-2014 11:14 AM
โSep-25-2014 01:53 PM
topless wrote:
The easiest way to see if you have a bad valve is to take a small ( I use a dollar bill) piece of paper and hold it in front of the exhaust pipe. It should blow away at a steady rate, if there is a bad valve, it will flip back on the dead cylinder.
The ticking could be an exhaust leak, you have a problem getting rpm and this truck sat for years. Mufflers have internal baffles and over time they can and do, rust. If a baffle has broken loose it will block the exhaust flow, restricting the motors ability to breathe. It's also possible you have a plugged catalytic converter. Since you replaced the fuel pump, and I assume the fuel filter, then low rpm and lack of power takes you to the exhaust side of the motor.
The 351 is a good motor and you just drove it 1400 miles, I doubt something has gone bad in there.
โSep-23-2014 06:20 AM
โSep-22-2014 03:40 AM
Assyrian_Elvis wrote:
It drove fine with no ticking 1400 miles from vegas to little rock. The owner told me it was sitting in storage for 5 years. I had to repace the rear fuel pump and sending unit because the gas was old and dirty and the pump didnt work. I drove it with the front fuel pump from vegas to little rock with no problems. I just wanna know whats the acceleration problem? Is it the exhaust manifold cracked or low air pressure from a bad sticky valve making the ticking noise. Ive had for a few months a few weeks ago the ticking started coming from the right side of the engine right on the driver side near the power steering pump. Are you saying I need to do a compression test and see how many pounds of air compression its making? I dont understand or know what a vacumm test is. I did replace the valve cover gaskets and intake manifold gasket but they were all made by felpro and not the original motorcraft,
โSep-22-2014 02:36 AM
โSep-22-2014 01:33 AM
ernie1 wrote:
What engine do you have? A 351 or 460 ci? The 460s are notorious for having cracked exhaust manifold.
โSep-22-2014 01:30 AM
ernie1 wrote:
What engine do you have? A 351 or 460 ci? The 460s are notorious for having cracked exhaust manifold.
โSep-22-2014 01:29 AM
coolmom42 wrote:
Switch to 89 octane for a while and run a can of Seafoam through the gas tank.
Also..... if that is the original propane tank, it is way past due for inspection or replacement. I would replace the entire tank.
โSep-22-2014 01:26 AM
ol' grouch wrote:
How long did it sit before you got it? I've seen a lot of cars over the years bog down and not want to go very fast. A few things it could be are;
Mice building a nest in the tail pipe plugging it up.
Internally rusted muffler
Slipped timing chain from miles. They usually last about 120,000 miles but a lot of idlingcan shorten that.
Hook a vacuum guage to the intake and see what you get. A healthy engine will pull between 17 and 20 inches of vacuum.
Now, the ticking could be a sticky lifter.
โSep-21-2014 08:25 PM
โSep-21-2014 06:13 PM
โSep-21-2014 05:15 PM
โSep-21-2014 01:16 PM
Assyrian_Elvis wrote:some chevy engines ping on 87 use lucas and some supreme see if it goes away mine doesnewman fulltimer wrote:
sounds like valve pinging time for a tune up and good quality gas on the noise
I do use 87 gas, The van has been fully tuned up, changed both fuel pumps, sending unit, fuel selector valve, I use 1030 castrol gtx synthetic oil.
โSep-21-2014 11:45 AM
WyoTraveler wrote:
If you have a large propane dealer near you they can change out those valves if the tank is empty.
โSep-21-2014 11:44 AM
newman fulltimer wrote:
sounds like valve pinging time for a tune up and good quality gas on the noise
โSep-21-2014 11:36 AM