Gerald Morris
Senior Member
I’ve heard of the BFH/length of pipe method, I’m hoping it doesn’t come to that. I’m fairly certain that it’s just the rings, I borescoped the chambers out and there was a halfway decent amount of surface rust (no pitting.) It got parked because the PO sucked some of the fiberglass blanket down the intake, that couldn’t potentially bend a con rod could it?
I used about 4 feet of fence tubing over my 3/4" breaker bar, AFTER having liberally soaked each cylinder in penetrant and 10W mineral oil for over a week, AND cleaning off every piston surface, picking broken remnants of the topmost rings off AND polishing out the exposed surfaces of the bores with a stone cylinder hone to remove rust.
I then succeeded in breaking the crankshaft loose by GENTLY nudging my long handled breaker bar back and forth, going backward until the damper bolt in the crankshaft would begin to turn loose. Then, I would tighten the balancer bolt back down to spec, and a bit over. The pistons began to move, mm by mm at first, then, more de-rusting w the hone, more oil and penetrant, et VOILA! I got it to turn a couple afternoons after the first movement.
Expect similar requirements.















