Tiny oil pan leak. Have any of you done this without a lift?
#1
Drifting
Thread Starter
Tiny oil pan leak. Have any of you done this without a lift?
Looks like my balancer scrubbed a tiny hole in the oil pan when it shifted back. Since I didn't know I didn't ask to have it fixed along with the balancer and rear end. Thus, I am considering just swapping the oil pan myself. I think I have found the part. Crossing fingers. So I will find gaskets and tear into it. But it will be me, jackstands and garage floor. Any advice?
#2
Pro
Looks like my balancer scrubbed a tiny hole in the oil pan when it shifted back. Since I didn't know I didn't ask to have it fixed along with the balancer and rear end. Thus, I am considering just swapping the oil pan myself. I think I have found the part. Crossing fingers. So I will find gaskets and tear into it. But it will be me, jackstands and garage floor. Any advice?
If its the top there is no trick, you will have to drop the cradle to replace it. If its the bottom piece its easy as pie. If its the whole pan:
Its about an 8-10 hour job. Once you dig into it, you may just wish you had the shop do it.
quotes are anywhere from 600-1200 depending.
Someone did a tiny writeup, look at post 3
https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums...n-removal.html
Last edited by midnight01; 06-19-2017 at 04:05 PM.
#3
Melting Slicks
I have dropped the front cradle in my garage on jack stands. I used a motor cycle jack that worked great to do the job. The motor will have to be supported from above while you drop the cradle and while you remove and replace the oil pan. I have an engine lift that worked for that.
You will need these or other similar tools to do the job. It was not that hard just took a lot of time. Good luck getting your oil pan replaced.
You will need these or other similar tools to do the job. It was not that hard just took a lot of time. Good luck getting your oil pan replaced.
#4
Drifting
Thread Starter
I have dropped the front cradle in my garage on jack stands. I used a motor cycle jack that worked great to do the job. The motor will have to be supported from above while you drop the cradle and while you remove and replace the oil pan. I have an engine lift that worked for that.
You will need these or other similar tools to do the job. It was not that hard just took a lot of time. Good luck getting your oil pan replaced.
You will need these or other similar tools to do the job. It was not that hard just took a lot of time. Good luck getting your oil pan replaced.
Thoughts?
#5
Pro
Im surprised the shop that replaced the balancer did not replace the seal. When my shop did mine they did it without even asking but im glad they did. If its the seal the balancer has to come off again to replace it. I would do it because to remember to put a quart of oil in every couple hundred miles will get on your nerves and it could get worse. The higher the rpms the more pressure.
#6
Drifting
Thread Starter
Originally Posted by midnight01
Im surprised the shop that replaced the balancer did not replace the seal. When my shop did mine they did it without even asking but im glad they did. If its the seal the balancer has to come off again to replace it. I would do it because to remember to put a quart of oil in every couple hundred miles will get on your nerves and it could get worse. The higher the rpms the more pressure.
#7
Melting Slicks
Member Since: Nov 2014
Location: Havre de Grace Maryland
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Can you see the hole? If you can, why not have someone spot weld for the fix? Had a VW that I ran over something in the road that punchured the gas tank. Took it to my mechanic and he spot welded at fix.
#8
Melting Slicks
The way the pan gasket seals I would investigate the leak fully before I assumed it was the pan and not the front cover. Look at the picture of the gasket and notice how it seals:
The black strip is the seal and is towards the rear of the pan lip. I have seen holes worn into the front cover as well as the pan and could possibly leak from there.
The black strip is the seal and is towards the rear of the pan lip. I have seen holes worn into the front cover as well as the pan and could possibly leak from there.
#9
Drifting
Thread Starter
Originally Posted by zachaeous
The way the pan gasket seals I would investigate the leak fully before I assumed it was the pan and not the front cover. Look at the picture of the gasket and notice how it seals:
The black strip is the seal and is towards the rear of the pan lip. I have seen holes worn into the front cover as well as the pan and could possibly leak from there.
The black strip is the seal and is towards the rear of the pan lip. I have seen holes worn into the front cover as well as the pan and could possibly leak from there.
#11
Drifting
Thread Starter
Originally Posted by unlvrebel
Once you've isolated the leak and it is the pan gasket, maybe a simple dab of RTV... Might work, might not, but worth a shot to save some time...