Jump to content

empty engine fluids question


natedogg624
 Share

Recommended Posts

doing the transmission swap this winter brings a lot of things i have to plan and account for.

one question being the engine fluids.

i need to drain the coolant and oil obviously to be able to work on the engine and take it apart and what not.

question being will the engine be ok with no fluids in it especially in the winter months?

im in the process of tearing down but don't plan on doing anything engine related until january.

the next thing to take off is the radiator/headers obviously i need to drain the coolant to take off the radiator. will the engine be ok with no coolant until mid/end january?

basically whats your advice?

just leave it sit until its time to drop the engine and then drain or would i be ok draining now?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you drain the coolant system, don't flush it with water. Don't do that until you are ready to replace the coolant. This will prevent possible freezing, and possible flash corrosion.

FOD= foriegn object damage. Cover all openings well enough to prevent critters, dirt, missing parts, rain, nuts&bolts, etc from getting in. This also needs to try and prevent air(oxygen) from causing corrosion inside. I like duct tape, but you have to check it often to see if it's still attached and doing the job. Fluids including oil will eventually flow off of the interior surfaces and no longer protect them. Protecting the cylinder walls, and cam lobes, is the biggest worry. You can squirt oil in the cylinders to help out. Turn the crank to coat the cylinder walls. Put the spark plugs back in, etc.

Corrosion is an oxide compound of metals. Exposure to the air creates it. It's the same hardness as sandpaper (harder than metal). The less of the stuff floating around on the inside of the engine, the better.

If it were me, I'd avoid tearing the engine down until I was ready to put it back together. This shouldn't take more then a few days to a week if all the parts and materials are ready to go. Then you'd have no worries.

I want to take my valve cover off and mess with it. But I'm not going to do that till the Springtime when I will probably do a valve adjust at the same time. I don't want it off the engine for very long.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You can drain the coolant and pull the motor. Coolant will leave enough of a film to protect against any surface rusting or whatnot. Hell, we dump the race coolant from the motors over winter with no issues whatsoever.

If you are not planning to take the motor apart until later, just wait, though.

However, if it is within a few months, pull it and start the cleaning process. Meaning, get the exterior of the motor cleaned as you have a great chance to do so outside the chassis.

Personally, I'd just pull her, put it on the table/bench and start into her. Why wait?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

that was the original plan was to get a head start on cleaning the block up.

oil i was going to save until last just because that didn't involve something outside the engine to take off. such as the radiator with the coolant.

taking apart the bike was entirely too easy, i had nearly everything apart in ~2 lazy hours.

im not going to start tearing into the engine until mid january, id start now but i have exams coming up and then ill be gone for the whole month of december, and then ill get settled back into school.

i do have a heated closet in our garage i may just put the engine on a box crate and leave it in there until i come back.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

ok so coolant ok to drain but just be careful of the radiator, correct?

what are some steps i could take to prevent it from oxidizing/rusting?

not draining the oil til i get to that point. i knew that from the beginning sorry i should have been more clear with my OP.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

ok so coolant ok to drain but just be careful of the radiator, correct?

what are some steps i could take to prevent it from oxidizing/rusting?

not draining the oil til i get to that point. i knew that from the beginning sorry i should have been more clear with my OP.

Again, it is not going to oxidize and such fast. You can drain coolant out and it will take a VERY long time - probably close to a year for it to matter. We have spare radiators that had only race coolant in them (Has lubrication qualities like the green stuff) and they sit for years before they ever (If they actually ever get used at all) get used and they are totally fine.

For a few months, it isn't going to matter one bit...

If it has green in it and you drain it, it'll be good until you go to use it again...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...