I've always seen this bearing sold separately, so I think you are correct.SteinOnkel wrote:Am I correct in assuming that the pilot bearing is not part of a run-of-the-mill clutch kit?
-Bryan
I've always seen this bearing sold separately, so I think you are correct.SteinOnkel wrote:Am I correct in assuming that the pilot bearing is not part of a run-of-the-mill clutch kit?
Yes, although I can't speak for all engines. I replaced the oil pump in my 1438cc engine without removing the engine, although it's not for the faint of heart. Remove the top nuts on the engine mounts. Raise the engine up a couple inches with a jack. Loosen the oil pan bolts. Drop the oil pan a couple inches. Through the very small slit between the oil pan and the bottom of the block, remove the two 13mm bolts that hold the oil pump in place. Once the oil pump is loose, you can maneuver the oil pan around enough to remove it. This is the easy part. Putting it back together is harder. On a scale of 0 to 10 where 1 is rebuilding the transmission and 7 requires telekinesis and finger joints that humans do not have, this is about a 4. A 10 requires quantum tunneling or Higgs bosons or something like that.SteinOnkel wrote:Is it possible to take the oil pan out without removing the cross member?
I don't think so. I do now seem to recall that one sticking point was the header/exhaust pipe, so that might have to be loosened as well. I can't promise you can raise the engine by several inches, but one or two inches should be do-able. I think the amount is limited by when the rear of the cam boxes hit the body, or the bellhousing hits the transmission tunnel. In my case, it was a 1438cc engine so maybe I had more room.RRoller123 wrote:Wouldn't you also have to loosen the transmission yoke and the side support bar? Or is there enough play to raise the engine a few inches without doing this?