Jump to content

Made my leakdown tester and found the leak! Need ideas on how to repair the cub cyl


Recommended Posts

So I made my leakdown tester today so that i can get this thing tore apart and see how much damage im dealing with but anyways it turned out awesome thanks to the sticky how to on this website but the results have me needing more advice! I pumped it up to 6psi and it seemed to be holding but ever so slowly starts dropping and seemed to be dropping faster than it should. I would say 5 minutes and it's down to zero. I sprayed everything down and only leak I could find is on the right side intake part of cylinder where those stupid little holes are on a cub cyl from I guess the factory drilling and tapping the bolt holes for your intake manifold... I was told these holes were normal for a cub but the top right one is leaking. None of the other little holes are. It will slowly bubble out of there and my right cylinder is the one I had most problems with and couldn't get to run right and also was the one backfiring. So I'm guessing this was enough of a leak to make it run lean? But what I don't get is how that started to leak if that hole isn't supposed to go all the way thru into the intake tract. How should I repair it? Will it need to be welded or is there other options like filling it in with some sort of sealer that holds up to gasoline? I'll have the cylinder off so if it needs to be welded then so be it I weld aluminum at work all the time just not cast so that's why I want to know my options. Thanks again a026fb4f013c56d96209ea7da5fc3142.jpge0a2dbc46f0c0234401f8a520fd7a010.jpgc1eb798e6d10ceb5a114396441388610.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's probably leaking around the gasket, then around the bolt. If the hole dosen't go into the intake, that's the only way it could leak.

If you remove the reed blocks and you see a hole on the inside, I'd use morose A/B.

You were right man it is leaking past the gasket and out the threads of the bolt hole... the surface for the gasket to seal on there is extremely thin so should I use any extra sealant on the gasket itself too? They are brand new gaskets
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You were right man it is leaking past the gasket and out the threads of the bolt hole... the surface for the gasket to seal on there is extremely thin so should I use any extra sealant on the gasket itself too? They are brand new gaskets

Yep. The most inside edge of them has very little meat for sealing surface.

Use thick , high quality gaskets, with a very thin smearing of import grey usually does the trick.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yep. The most inside edge of them has very little meat for sealing surface.

Use thick , high quality gaskets, with a very thin smearing of import grey usually does the trick.

Ok will do thanks alot. I got brand new gaskets with my new intake recently but maybe they're cheaper gaskets. I'll have to pick up some better quality
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ok will do thanks alot. I got brand new gaskets with my new intake recently but maybe they're cheaper gaskets. I'll have to pick up some better quality

They might be fine.

Also, I like to lightly tighten the reeds while the sealant is curing, let it set a little bit, THEN torque to spec .

Sometimes the sealant will let the gasket slip if you apply too much torque while it's still uncured.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...