Re: Head Gaskets?
I don't necessarily think you've done bottom end damage if the head gaskets go. I'd need to see more proof before saying that was a fact. My passenger head gasket blew, bottom end looks almost brand new. They can be done in the truck but it's just easier to pull the motor.
The cliff notes on what happened would be...
truck has ext wastegate, turned boost down to 10psi trying to get truck to run with 0 knock before bumping up the boost.
One day i start the truck and the idle goes up to 3k rpms and stays there, CE light comes on, and after a few minutes the truck regulates itself back down to normal idle and the CE light turns off, everything is fine after. This progressively got worse and worse to where the idle wouldn't go down, even if I drove the truck.
OK, must be the MAF sensor, replaced that... no change, took it back and got another one, just to make sure... no change.
Exhaust is puffing steam and smells like coolant, and coolant overflow is empty, but temp gauge holds at 180*.
Stop off at my parents one day, refill overflow, and let the truck cool down. Hour later, I start the truck, idle goes up to 3500 and stays there... no CE light. After 5min of idle at 3500 and no change, I back out of the driveway get a few hundred feet down the street and there's no power, I pull over, and the truck stalls out. I start the truck and the idle is rough, turn around and head back to my parents house and there's no power.
Eventually limp it back to my house, and check compression with one of those spark plug type gauges. 0 compression in 1 & 2 cylinder, all others are normal.
Even when I had a motor with blown rings I got SOME reading on the compression tester in all cylinders. Seems odd to get 0psi in 1 cylinder on each side and full psi in all the others. Also, when the truck is idling, there's no smoke puffing out when I remove the oil filler cap... I know that's not a definitive way of checking for blown rings, but you'd think there'd be smoke coming out somewhere if that were the case. I can bust open the oil filter and see if there's anything in it, but I don't think I'll find anything.
I once convinced a girl that because of the curvature of the earth, you actually get better gas mileage driving south because you're essentially driving "down hill". :lol: However, I feel about as dumb as her when it comes to the intricacies of cylinders vs heads with these trucks.