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oil pan gasket, ea82 86 gl


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loosen/remove the engine mounts, remove the rear trans mount as well (so the engine/trans can tilt back so to speak without stressing the trans mount). then use a jack to push the front of the engine UP and give you the clearance. PITA is right. that's not even the most annoying part. often what looks like oil pan leaks really are something else. have you verified it's not something else ending up at the oil pan mating surface? then new gaskets often leak after being installed anyway. get a good OEM gasket, not a cheap-o, thin aftermarket job. make sure you get the pan and block clean, plan some time for this the cork is usually stuck on the pan really good. now that i think about it, it's so annoying it might be worht $25 to let a machine shop hot tank it for you. then you have to hope the pan is flush and the bolt holes aren't so concave that they cut into the new gasket and leak in a few months. if the bolts have been tightened in the past this is more probable, the bolt heads will deform the oil pan mating surface and make the bolt holes protrude up into the new gasket, degrading it over time.

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Gary's right, take that sucker to the car wash and degrease the engine.. try not to squirt anything electrical (squirt the inside of the distributor with WD40 before you go, and take the can with you in case), then see where the leak is coming from.

If you're inclined, replacing the oil pan gasket would be a great occasion for replacing the motor mounts as well..

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loosen/remove the engine mounts, remove the rear trans mount as well (so the engine/trans can tilt back so to speak without stressing the trans mount). then use a jack to push the front of the engine

 

 

hey thanks for the reply, is it possiable to flatten the oil pan whith a sraight edge and a brass hammer, have you ever tryed it, thanks ...Ivan

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hey thanks for the reply, is it possiable to flatten the oil pan whith a sraight edge and a brass hammer, have you ever tryed it, thanks ...Ivan

 

Never been there, never done that, BUT it sounds like a great idea... if you can get a piece of steel that would fit "inside" the channel that forms the rim of the oil pan, and its wider than the bolt holes, flattening it out could only help, from what I can see...

 

As I said though, I've never been there, anyone who has care to sound off on the idea?

 

My user title just changed over to "Subaru Master" because of my post count, and I TOTALLY don't feel up to the title, so I'm full of disclaimers lately :grin:

 

EDIT

 

In reading your other threads, it sounds like you are doing a total engine front reseal anyhow..... AND resealing your oil pump. Outside of what you are taking care of (oil seals, oil pump seals, pan gasket, t-belts**, water pump, etc) the two weakest points of this engine are the intake manifold gaskets, and especially the head gaskets.. once one of these engines hits 100K all they need is one serious overheat and it can cause a headgasket to blow.

 

**[dont forget the t-belt tensioner bearings, you can source the bearings yourself and get them cheaper than at a parts store...search or ask for more info]

 

Since you are getting all this preventative maintenance done right now, I would suggest considering just pulling the engine, and doing the headgaskets preemptively as well. While you are at it, you may as well give the radiator a good thorough flush and replace your thermostat.. that should guarantee you at LEAST another 100K of worry free driving.. and if your radiator is clean, and you keep it that way, probably more like 300K. (the intake manifold gaskets are kinda part of the headgasket job since they gotta come off and cant really be re used.)

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