Home 
Home Search search Menu menu Not logged in - Login | Register
> Jensen Healey & Jensen GT Tech > Cooling > Tip for water pump removal. Lotus 907

 Moderated by: Greg Fletcher
New Topic Reply Printer Friendly
Tip for water pump removal. Lotus 907  Rate Topic 
AuthorPost
 Posted: 11-02-2016 08:56 am
  PM Quote Reply
1st Post
qwerty
Member


Joined: 10-01-2016
Location: Australia
Posts: 77
Status: 
Offline
Specifically the bastard bolt that will foul on the Aux Pulley when removing, i read on another forum to shave down a spare 10mm box spanner which helped to get in between the pulley and the hex head. Better still use a double offset box spanner ground down on the outside and attack it from the front of the engine.

Unscrewing the bolt reavealed that it will hit a tooth on the wheel preventing full removal of the bolt, the tip is to rotate the crank so the bolt center is in the valley of a tooth and it will clear and can be unscrewed by hand.

Will be replacing with Stainless Cap Screws.

Attachment: Water pump bolt.JPG (Downloaded 167 times)

Last edited on 11-02-2016 08:58 am by qwerty

Back To Top PM Quote Reply  

 Posted: 11-03-2016 06:56 pm
  PM Quote Reply
2nd Post
redracer
Member
 

Joined: 09-10-2012
Location: BROOKHAVEN, Georgia USA
Posts: 654
Status: 
Offline
On all the rebuilt water pumps I have done, I include an allen bolt to replace that one troublesome hex bolt, making removal and installation much easier.

Back To Top PM Quote Reply

 Posted: 11-08-2016 04:19 am
  PM Quote Reply
3rd Post
Esprit2
Member
 

Joined: 05-01-2005
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota USA
Posts: 575
Status: 
Offline
Some Allen drive cap screw heads (cheese heads) are taller than others, and can rub on the back of the pulley. Choose the lowest profile cap screw you can find, and use a thin, electronics panel washer instead of a normal thick one.

Regards,
Tim Engel

Back To Top PM Quote Reply  

 Posted: 11-08-2016 09:48 am
  PM Quote Reply
4th Post
qwerty
Member


Joined: 10-01-2016
Location: Australia
Posts: 77
Status: 
Offline
Esprit2 wrote: Some Allen drive cap screw heads (cheese heads) are taller than others, and can rub on the back of the pulley. Choose the lowest profile cap screw you can find, and use a thin, electronics panel washer instead of a normal thick one.

Regards,
Tim Engel

Taller or shorter may be special purpose. They should all be DIN/ISO Standard dimensions. I'll report back if there is interference.

If you happen to have a taller cap head, machining or grinding them down to a clearance shouldn't be an issue. Button heads will clear easily although they are a fair bit weaker.

Last edited on 11-08-2016 09:54 am by qwerty

Back To Top PM Quote Reply

 Posted: 11-09-2016 07:19 am
  PM Quote Reply
5th Post
Esprit2
Member
 

Joined: 05-01-2005
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota USA
Posts: 575
Status: 
Offline
qwerty wrote:
Button heads will clear easily although they are a fair bit weaker.As noted, button heads are weaker... I wouldn't use one. But more importantly, diameter is important. The key advantage of the cheese head cap screw is that it's small enough in diameter to fit between adjacent teeth on the pulley. Just rotate the pulley to align, and the Allen cap screw should come out. I don't know if that's true of all button heads.

Regards,
Tim Engel

Back To Top PM Quote Reply  

 Posted: 11-09-2016 09:15 am
  PM Quote Reply
6th Post
qwerty
Member


Joined: 10-01-2016
Location: Australia
Posts: 77
Status: 
Offline
They should all be the same OD regardless of type as per the standards, though cheese head and the button's allen key size is from experiance one size smaller which is a pain. I'm looking at getting a full size cap screws all over the water pump, fan pulley and cam covers, anything a can really, i'm a big fan. I'd even go Torx Button Heads but availability isn't that great.

Tim can you remember the bolt thread off the top of your head and i'll look them up and compare them with the hex head bolt's diameter. ( i haven't got the car here to measure). Generally the dia of a cap screw is the distance across the flats of a hex head.

Last edited on 11-09-2016 09:19 am by qwerty

Back To Top PM Quote Reply

 Posted: 11-10-2016 12:59 am
  PM Quote Reply
7th Post
qwerty
Member


Joined: 10-01-2016
Location: Australia
Posts: 77
Status: 
Offline
No clearance issues at all, breezed it in with the stock washer.

Standard M6 x 25 Cap Screw as pictured.
Head Dia 10mm, smaller than a hex head bolt.
Head depth 5.82mm (without washer)

Attachment: Waterpump looking down.JPG (Downloaded 107 times)

Last edited on 11-11-2016 10:11 am by qwerty

Back To Top PM Quote Reply  

 Posted: 11-11-2016 05:30 am
  PM Quote Reply
8th Post
Esprit2
Member
 

Joined: 05-01-2005
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota USA
Posts: 575
Status: 
Offline
qwerty wrote:
Tim can you remember the bolt thread off the top of your head and i'll look them up and compare them with the hex head bolt's diameter. ( i haven't got the car here to measure). Generally the dia of a cap screw is the distance across the flats of a hex head.
No, I don't recall. I've never made a point of tracking down a specific bolt as much as I've gone to the local hardware store and bought what they had.

Regards,
Tim Engel

Back To Top PM Quote Reply

Current time is 09:17 pm  
> Jensen Healey & Jensen GT Tech > Cooling > Tip for water pump removal. Lotus 907 Top




UltraBB 1.172 Copyright © 2007-2011 Data 1 Systems