Hillbilly Heaven
Explorer
Good to hear you had no problems pulling them with 185K on the them. Still looking for a scapegoat to change mine with over 200K on the originals. Which antiseize do you use? The silver or copper?
a few more pics / descriptions related to the previous post / issue
The heater hose firewall connection T. Giant pieces of excrement. it uses a compression connector that's obviously made for very quick assembly on the line. You just stab them on the pipe ends. Getting them off, getting them off after 100k mi, without a special tool and limited access for large hands, a bleeding nightmare. There are several hot to vids on you'tube, I ended up trying both the cheap line disconnector tool and ultimately used zip ties to apply enough crimping leverage force to the 'hand' connector to pry it loose.
Not so hot for this, find a better set.
The fitting, there are two, black and white. Again I presume to make assembly easy, 'the white is always on the right'.
ADDENDUM - the 'T' connectors are on the SUVs with rear heat / AC. SUVs without and pickups have a straight connector, but with a similar compression fitting and fragility in high-mileage vehicles.
In situ, the cursed thing. It's up under the cowl, pretty much over the #8 coil pack / exhaust port area. That filthy discolored brown is a result of heat, age and Dexcool dye
I think part of the culprit is the rigid hose holder that's attached to the engine, the hoses move with the engine, while the connectors are anchored to the firewall. The connector and its internal o-ring shift and rub until the o-ring degrades to nothing and then it's a beer tap at a frat party.
The black stuff on the pipe at the upper right WAS most of the o-ring.
And all pretty, ready for reinstall, took me 2 hrs to wrestle that sumbitch apart and 2 mins to put it back together.
slight tick from drivers side engine....speeds up with acceleration....manifolds? or lifters? seems to lessen when the rig warms up more...
Could be the infamous broken manifold bolt on the rear most drivers side, but if it goes away once it warms up I would be donut gaskets on the Y pipe.
We have I think four different 5.3's with the broken rear bolt and none of them leak exhaust, these manifolds are pretty thick flanged and as long as the other bolts are tight they don't seem to leak!
they do however develop a tick inside the engine as they age, never anything more than a noise though, use a quart of sea foam next oil change and it usually gets a lot quieter!
We have I think four different 5.3's with the broken rear bolt and none of them leak exhaust, these manifolds are pretty thick flanged and as long as the other bolts are tight they don't seem to leak!
they do however develop a tick inside the engine as they age, never anything more than a noise though, use a quart of sea foam next oil change and it usually gets a lot quieter!
I put it in when changing the oil and leave it for 3000 til the next oil change with no problems!Run it how long with the seafoam in there?