RTV900 thermostat housing

D&D Farm

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Good JOB Bud...........That's the way to think things through and then get the job done. God bless.......Dennis
 

v10rick

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Okay, I fixed it and I did not have to remove the head. I bought a new gasket from Kubota for $1.80. I took a hammer and chisel and broke the old housing at the bolt hole. Then I took a hacksaw and cut the head off of the old bolt and used a pair of needle nose pliers to remove the old bolt. I took an identical sized bolt and put a nut on it and then using a grinder I ground off enough of the bolt so that it would fit into the space between the front of the head and the rear of the water pump housing. Once the bolt was short enough I took the nut off to "fix" the threads from the grinding. I then put the new bolt into the appropriate bolt hole and then placed the gasket onto the bold and slid it into place. I lined up the other bolts and threaded them into the head but did not tighten them down. After this I used a flat blade screw driver to push the bolt against it's hole and then got it to start and tightened it down. I think its being held by 4 or 5 threads but it tightened and once the others were tight it does not leak.

Kind of a piss-poor design but I'm glad I was able to make this repair without having to pull the head.

All in all the job was a success, I just wonder how long it's going to stay together since I replaced a piston & rod from another engine - but I did use the same bearings so maybe I'm good...

Thanks for this rjglenn!

It seems the PO neglected the coolant system, on the new to me RTV.

The radiator and overflow tank were full of rust. Instead of trying to work with it I replaced the radiator, tank, hoses and thermostat.

Crossed my fingers (hoping that this would be it) during the test run I noticed water seeping from the side of the thermostat housing. Crap...there is a hairline crack the entire length of the housing.

Not wanting to pull the head, until I am certain its necessary,I decided to try rjglenn's approach with a slight twist.

I drilled a hole through the T housing flange towards the mounting screw, behind the water pump. Using a center punch I struck and broke the flange.
Next I cut the screw with a sawzall.

There was no need to custom cut a screw to fit, the local True Value had the correct length screw.

Yes it only provides 3-4 threads to screw into the engine but this a fly weight assembly and there is not a lot of water pressure there.

I just need it to work long enough to determine if there are any other engine issues.

BTW I was surprised to see a hose washer inside the head, where the T housing bolts up.

Wish me luck.
 

rjglenn

Member
Wow, I forgot all about this. 11 days after I posted this I laid it over at 5 mph and broke my left leg just above the ankle. Two surgeries and a bunch of rehab later I was able to walk. I was off work for about 3 months. I hope your after repair luck is better than mine..
 

Jim_S

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Wow, I forgot all about this. 11 days after I posted this I laid it over at 5 mph and broke my left leg just above the ankle. Two surgeries and a bunch of rehab later I was able to walk. I was off work for about 3 months. I hope your after repair luck is better than mine..

OUCH!

Glad you’re up and about again.

Jim
 

v10rick

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Wow, I forgot all about this. 11 days after I posted this I laid it over at 5 mph and broke my left leg just above the ankle. Two surgeries and a bunch of rehab later I was able to walk. I was off work for about 3 months. I hope your after repair luck is better than mine..

Oh man sorry to her that. I will be especially careful when going for a test run.
I take it the repair worked up until the accident.

Again...many thanks for this thread.
 

Peanut

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It's cast aluminum - not something that I would be able to weld cause I don't have the skills...

i use aluminum welding rods on cast aluminum havent had any break yet so you might wanna try them.now they are pricey but they are worth every penny when you need them.
 
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