Long story: made longer...
I bought a 2002 Grand Cherokee with the 4.7 on kijiji (It's like craigslist). Anyway, the owner said it needed a head gasket, and I believed him. First mistake. I am just about a newly minted certified mechanic, so I am still pretty green. Anyway, I realized the truck had a misfire and thought it was spark/coil related, or maybe two holes side by side sharing compression. After getting the truck home I find good spark on all plugs, but find cylinders 1 & 2 have no compression. So, I built a leakdown tool (a regulator, two pressure gauges, and a restriction orifice between the gauges to show drop), and tested each cylinder (each cylinder while testing must have the piston positioned at tdc on the compression stroke, but you probably knew that, I was just saying this so someone didn't comment on how I did it wrong or something). Anyway, found leakage to crankcase on cylinder number 2 and cylinder number 1 was leaking to intake and crankcase. Now I am into the truck for an engine swap...
While working on this project though I have regained the appreciation for "tinkering" - man, it's relaxing, frustrating, time consuming, expensive, but satisfying. Even with my poor, pathetically cheap tool collection (at home). I noticed though, that I LOVE this set - or this idea:
It's so cheap, but I love how organized it is, how easy it is to grab a socket and return to its location when done. How simple and pleasing everything looks when all put away - these sets are great to work out of, and they really do almost 90 percent of what needs doing - very rarely am I searching for a larger socket, or the 1/2" drive stuff - though that stuff is needed, I am finding it not as horrible as I thought it would be working at home with the cheaper tools.
Hope you guys are having a good week.
Here is where the WJ sits until I am done my next few days of work - almost ready to be pulled.
I bought a 2002 Grand Cherokee with the 4.7 on kijiji (It's like craigslist). Anyway, the owner said it needed a head gasket, and I believed him. First mistake. I am just about a newly minted certified mechanic, so I am still pretty green. Anyway, I realized the truck had a misfire and thought it was spark/coil related, or maybe two holes side by side sharing compression. After getting the truck home I find good spark on all plugs, but find cylinders 1 & 2 have no compression. So, I built a leakdown tool (a regulator, two pressure gauges, and a restriction orifice between the gauges to show drop), and tested each cylinder (each cylinder while testing must have the piston positioned at tdc on the compression stroke, but you probably knew that, I was just saying this so someone didn't comment on how I did it wrong or something). Anyway, found leakage to crankcase on cylinder number 2 and cylinder number 1 was leaking to intake and crankcase. Now I am into the truck for an engine swap...
While working on this project though I have regained the appreciation for "tinkering" - man, it's relaxing, frustrating, time consuming, expensive, but satisfying. Even with my poor, pathetically cheap tool collection (at home). I noticed though, that I LOVE this set - or this idea:
It's so cheap, but I love how organized it is, how easy it is to grab a socket and return to its location when done. How simple and pleasing everything looks when all put away - these sets are great to work out of, and they really do almost 90 percent of what needs doing - very rarely am I searching for a larger socket, or the 1/2" drive stuff - though that stuff is needed, I am finding it not as horrible as I thought it would be working at home with the cheaper tools.
Hope you guys are having a good week.
Here is where the WJ sits until I am done my next few days of work - almost ready to be pulled.
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