Timing chain broke
#1
Timing chain broke
The timing chain on my 2003 5.9L Dodge Durango broke. It was running fine before, but after replacing it, it runs like it is dead on several cylinders. The mechanic that checked my timing said to find out if this engine is an interference engine or not. Can anyone help my answer this question?
#5
Yes, the 5.9 does indeed seem to be an interference engine. If the chain breaks, pistons meet valves, and havoc ensues. Bent valves, broken pistons, and all the fun that comes with it.
Compression test first, see what ya get. If you do indeed see zeroes on a bunch of cylinders, you *might* be able to get away with just replacing the heads..... However, if you broke pistons, replacing the engine completely becomes the cheaper alternative.
#6
I wouldn't do a compression test. I'd pull the rockers to let all the valves seat, then first do a simple 'leak down' test rather than cranking anything for a compression test. I buggered a valve a few yrs ago (mis-installed a roller rocker), and it was easy to hear the air kicking back through the intake/exhaust.
#7
I wouldn't do a compression test. I'd pull the rockers to let all the valves seat, then first do a simple 'leak down' test rather than cranking anything for a compression test. I buggered a valve a few yrs ago (mis-installed a roller rocker), and it was easy to hear the air kicking back through the intake/exhaust.
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#8
I wouldn't do a compression test. I'd pull the rockers to let all the valves seat, then first do a simple 'leak down' test rather than cranking anything for a compression test. I buggered a valve a few yrs ago (mis-installed a roller rocker), and it was easy to hear the air kicking back through the intake/exhaust.
#9
Yes, it is hurt, pull the valve covers, pull the rockers as mentioned above, pull the push rods they are probably bent too, and because your mechanic doesn't know if it's an interference engine or not my guess is he does not know how to do a leak down test. just put a straight edge across the valves, you will see all the bent ones, stems will be all different heights. The best part is, it will have at very least dented the pistons. did this on a 383 just starting it once....it never even ran, just turning it over bent all valves took out pistons. If your engine broke chain while running down road you may have even bent a rod if it hit hard enough.
#10
I work at a shop and the mechanic that checked my timing is my boss. He is teaching me how to do all this stuff. Thank you for the help though.