Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hey guys, my water pump split the other day and drained most of the coolant, i noticed quite quickly that there was a problem, but with a very tight inlet cam and some other tests done, its confirmed, my head is warped >_<

What i'm looking at is using a engine crane to lift the body over the engine( no i don't have a hoist), leave the motor and box together mounted on the subframe, replace the head, reasemble and refit.

I'd like to know if you guy recon its the best way to tackle the situation.

only thing i was thinking is lifting the car that high, would the rear bumper hit the ground....maybe??

any help from people that have removed the engine out the bottom without a hoist would be appreciated also.

you might not get it high enough to clear the engine and that, easiest way is just to pull the engine and gearbox out as one that way you can still push the car around and steer it easy without having to fight an engine crane aswell

You could try and put the car up on ramps with the back wheels and stands at the front. Wheel a trolly under the engine and gearbox and lift the trolly up to the engine and gearbox, then lower it down to the floor. Then use your crane to lift the front of the car up high enough so you can roll the trolly out. The ramps under the rear wheels will ensure you dont scrape the back end of the car on the ground. Using a block and tackle to the roof to lift the car is another approach ive seen.

Its a lot of hard work if you havent done it before, so its a good idea to get someone involved thats has done it to make sure you dont un-necessarily remove things that dont need to be removed. You'd be surprised just how complete the whole assembly does come out.

You could take the head off with the engine still in the car..

But you have an engine crane obviously.. why try lift the car up? just take the bonnet off and pull the engine out the normal way.

I have thought about it both ways, done some searches on SAU too, i was originally thinking i would remove the head in the car, but after some reading it seemed some people thought it was easier to just remove the whole engine.......

Initially i was going to remove all head bolts and pipes etc and try are remove the head with the turbos and plenum intact, obviously using an engine crane or block and tackle, reassemble all gear to the new head, with jun cams,:thumbsup: and refit.

I have removed this motor before and plenty of others amongst buiding a few rb30's, so i'm no stranger to the whole engine thing, just the 32 GTR engine / engine bay is kinda tight, just trying to see thoughts on the easiest way.

Dropping the whole subframe from a GTR is the hard way of doing the engine.

Leave the box in and only pull the engine.

Heads in situ are not not hard.

Leave the turbos in place and undo the two four bolt flanges, manifolds stay bolted to the head

Strip the front and remove timing belt etc obviously.

Remove alternator and starter motor so you can get the intake side off easier.

With the intake side off the rest is simple.

I don't ever recall pulling an engine to do a head, I know it's common practice but unnessisary.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Each to their own I guess  Me, I put just as much time into cleaning inside of the cars as I do on the outside As for getting wet, it is really no different than steam cleaning the carpets at home, apart from the cars carpet dries alot faster than the house, again, I only do it in the hotter months and leave the car opened up for a few hours As I only do it yearly, it is just before I do the diff and gearbox service, so I clean the carpets, then it's up on stands, wheels off, service, clean the undercarriage,  grease the bushings and do a nut and bolt check on everything  Disclaimer: I typically had all the time in the world to kill when I was working 馃ぃ, so spending a full day or 2 cleaning, serving and "looking at stuff" was,  easily achievable, and a fun mental therapy day As for time to kill, I retired last Wednesday, so apart from my physical training, my days are filled with lots of random jobs around the house and garden...."Idle hands are the Devils something something" I am also buying a new house sooner rather than later, I'm actually looking at a potential property tomorrow, I'm looking forward to getting a car hoist as I'm starting to get to old to crawl around under a car, I can only imagine all the undercarriage cleaning and looking at stuff when that gets set up
    • Yeah, I'm not interested in wetting the carpets, and I don't care about brown dirt/dust that lives deep in the pile or underneath. It's not like I crawl around on them in my birthday suit or eat dropped food off them (because there is never any open food in my car). The seats are alcantara (cheap Chinese imitation alcantara, to be sure!) with barely 1" of foam pad behind the surface. That's not getting wet either. Any car that I would be happy to get the interior wet, I would not care to put the effort into.
    • We have one that holds 2.8L of water. On floor carpet that hasn't been touched in 2 or 3 years, will take a minimum of 2 fills of the tank to do a bedroom, and that's going AROUND the bed.   In the cruiser, I used an ENTIRE 2.8L tank, just on the front passenger footwell. But it had some fungus growing, and had been full of mud from being used as a 4WD for many years. I can do that floor again, and it will still pull mud out. However, the water now only looks dirty, not pitch black and leaving full sludge in the bottom of the tank it sucks back into. Oh, and, this is about a $1500 unit.
    • This is mine, works a treat for the cars, suction is good, I use the Bissell clean and protect stuff I have found giving it a good spray and light scrub with the soft brush on the head of the nossle for carpet, and a rub with a microfibre for cloth seats and cloth door trims, prior to another quick spray before vacuuming it up works the best @GTSBoy You would surprised on what it gets out of carpet and seats that actually "look" clean, I recommend that you test drive yours when you have a little time to kill, then post pics of the muddy looking water that I believe you will find
    • I think even the "commercial" capacity ones that you would hire from supermarkets etc wouldn't have the capacity to do all that much in one go. I will go through half a dozen tanks of solution and dumps/rinses of the waste tank for one little 2 seat sofa. Or similar for one 6 footish rug. That's the price you pay for something small that only takes up a bit of cupboard space, instead of something that takes up the entire laundry cupboard or half the shed.
  • Create New...