

Hard to tell at this point. If you can remove the seal carrier without tearing or ripping the oil pan gasket, you probably will be OK. But I've seen some oil pan gaskets that were pretty much "glued" on, and you had to destroy them to remove them.Pescado wrote:When removing the crankshaft seal carrier will it force me to get a new oil pan gasket?
It can, but it's not easy. You have to loosen the engine mounts and raise the engine up as high as you can, until the bellhousing hits the transmission tunnel, or the rears of the camshaft towers hit the firewall. With the engine supported, you can then drop the oil pan.Pescado wrote:Also can the oil pan be removed and replaced with the car on jacks and engine in place?
Oh man....where does this rabbit hole end???18Fiatsandcounting wrote:Hard to tell at this point. If you can remove the seal carrier without tearing or ripping the oil pan gasket, you probably will be OK. But I've seen some oil pan gaskets that were pretty much "glued" on, and you had to destroy them to remove them.Pescado wrote:When removing the crankshaft seal carrier will it force me to get a new oil pan gasket?
It can, but it's not easy. You have to loosen the engine mounts and raise the engine up as high as you can, until the bellhousing hits the transmission tunnel, or the rears of the camshaft towers hit the firewall. With the engine supported, you can then drop the oil pan.Pescado wrote:Also can the oil pan be removed and replaced with the car on jacks and engine in place?
There is another approach that might work. It is possible to remove the oil seals by drilling a small hole in the metal part of them and screwing in a sheet metal screw into the hole and grabbing that with vise grips to yank the seal out. Ideally you would use a slide hammer for this purpose. Sometimes it takes multiple attempts at different locations around the circumference. What you DON'T want to do is damage the seal carrier, so don't try to remove the seal by forcing a screwdriver or chisel between it and the carrier. You'll gouge the aluminum which can lead to leaks in the future.
If it were me, I'd drop the oil pan. That also allows you to clean it out, and if you are really motivated, to remove a main bearing cap or two and check the condition of the bearings.
-Bryan
That's a good idea and I just forgot to mention it. Set the crankshaft so the pistons are mid stroke, line up the cam and aux. shaft pulleys using the marks, then carefully turn the crankshaft until the #1 cylinder is at TDC. Install the belt and tighten the tensioner, then rotate the crankshaft by hand a few turns to make sure nothing is hitting. Check timing marks again and you should be good to go.Pescado wrote:I thought I read somewhere that all the pistons should be set to mid stroke before turning the cams.
The answer is... It depends. If cylinder #1 is at TDC, and the camshaft pulley timing holes are lined up with their pointers, then yes, the engine is set to fire on the number 4 cylinder, which is just the way Fiat did it. Not logical, but many things about these cars are not logical. So, with this being the case, you would orient the distributor so that the rotor is pointing to the #4 plug contact inside the cap.Pescado wrote:Are you saying the rotor contact portion should be lined up directly below the number 4 contact on the cap with the #1 cylinder at TDC?