Commer sump gasket replacement Sat 3rd September 2022
As Helen returned with son Matthew from the Green-Gathering festival in Chepstor last month, Pootle blew a hole in Piston No1 on the M4 (over advanced timing causing Pinking I think)…
My mate Bob and I replaced the piston three weeks ago and fitted modern ‘fangled’ Silicone gaskets and seals on the sump and Helen and I drove up to the Greenbelt festival in Kettering the following week.
Unfortunately the silicone end seals over the main bearing caps failed big-time and we had massive oil leaks and used a can of oil to get home safely.
On the plus side the engine ran really well with good temperature and oil pressure.
On Sat 3rd we replaced the failed silicone parts with old-school paper gaskets and cork end strips as originally fitted;
Biggest problem is removal/refitting of the sump….
Jack front up high on axel stands.
Turn steering full lock one side and remove track-rod from centre plate.
Repeat above for other track rod.
Remove clutch slave cylinder and blanking plate from lower bell-housing.
Remove all sump bolts and wiggle off the sump – need to move steering plate to driver’s side, rotate engine (plugs out) to position to allow sump to have clearance on No1 conrod/web and remove sump from passenger side. This can be done but it is fiddley, claustrophobic and dirty!
Once the sump was off, Bob cleaned off old seals and cleaned up the flange then used Wellseal to apply new side gaskets. I cleaned up the bottom of the engine with thinners and fitted the new cork strips to the bearing caps. The strips were correct length and pressed nicely into the milled grooves using suitable screwdriver to press them in cleanly. Lying on the drive doing this is very claustrophobic and my 18 years working on Tunnel Boring Machines helped here!
We then applied Wellseal to the bottom of the engine, fitted a couple of studs into two sump mounting holes for guiding the sump and fought for 15 mins to wiggle sump back on.
And, as John Haynes would say…. ‘Refitting is reversal of removal’….
Some pics of the task…




So with that done, here is the spare steering column ready for dismantling and adding a Prius electric steering system….. How hard can it be?
