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Engine Swap
I'm in the process of doing and engine swap in my 300D.
I've begun frantically disconnecting everything connected to the engine. Is there anything that I could possibly miss? This is the first time I've done this. |
Oil pressure line, ground strap, alternator wires, Vacuum shut-off line,...
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as many engines as I have pulled and put in, even in the same car sometimes :rolleyes: I always seem to miss something. Dont get in a hurry just move it an inch at a time and watch for things. even if you have everything disconnected things have a way of snagging and getting broken if you move too fast.
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On the first one I did, the oil pressure line wouldn't come out (12mm) of the filter housing so, being in a hurry, I cut it. Big mistake, new one was $50, next time I cut it lose at the instrument cluster.
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ground strap...yep, woulda forgot! anyone else have and swap experiences? |
I'm doing this on my 300D too. PS lines, vacuum pump, fuel lines, exhaust pipe, flex disc...
My Haynes manual actually came in very handy for this. I don't trust myself to think of everything that needs disconnecting. |
Pretty simple on the old diesels. I missed the ground strap on my first one, just go slow.
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little more cramped in the bay... Radiator and shroud are pulled. Flex disk and mounts by the end of the week. |
This link might help: http://mb.auto.pl/wis/w124/CD01/Engine/602_603/01-2400hx.pdf
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My first pull was my '87 300D/124, one more cylinder than yours, but it went okay with the trans attached. Be sure you have a cherry-picker with a lot of lift to get over the radiator shroud, the car will need to be up a foot or so to clear the tail-shaft.
Pulled a 603 from a '91 SDL today, spent about 8hours from start to finish including chatting, lunch, and running home for tools. I cheated though, cut the radiator top brace out. There just isn't that much attached to these engines, not like pulling a '90s Japanese gasser. Take lots of pictures and make lots of notes, the difficult part is when you have the engine back in the hole and aren't sure where a vacuum line goes. |
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:thumbsup:
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fan shroud and radiator are removed cherry-picker is far larger than needed. |
Large is good, extend the legs and boom, the extra lift is good to have. Do you have a "leveler" so you can tilt and level the engine as you pull it? I didn't on my 124, big pain as the engine came out at about a 30*-40* nose-high angle to clear the transmission, but then to get the tailshaft over the radiator upper support it had to go sky-high. A leveler would have saved me some grief.
The inner-firewall aluminum shroud on the passenger side is good to have out, gives better access to the exhaust. Easiest to remove the flex-pipe from the turbo, the exhaust gave me more trouble than anything, next most was getting the driveshaft free from the transmission. Watch for those transmission wires! |
I will have a leveler or whatever you call the tilting attachment for the picker.
I'm NOT looking forward to the flex disk, as I dont have a car lift and I hate working upside down... |
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