After completing this job, you realize why a shop wants the $ they do to do it. Well done, sir!
@realmaindrianpace8 жыл бұрын
Must be that million mile bulletproof Toyota quality we've been hearing about.
@Johnny33247 жыл бұрын
you did the right thing buying the kit, i found half my bolts stripped too. I then removed the block and had the bolts drilled and coiled for about $120, so i decided to do a ring job. i then replaced the crank bearings, all the seals, and had the same work done to the head. It runs great now, i would do the head bolts again but never the crank
@jasoncooke5741 Жыл бұрын
Good job sir well done. I see a camry on marketplace and the person is asking $1800 mechanics special with blown head gasket. Now I know what it involves I definitely would not even pay half of that. It has 231k miles on it so probably has the exact same issue. That looks like a lot of work and hassle I am not sure I could do all that just a above average backyard mechanic but tempted.
@artn76733 жыл бұрын
Wow glad to know it's alot more in depth than just a head gasket. Thanks for the heads up
@381914411 ай бұрын
I read the Toyota bullet on this repair TSB-0015-11 you don't drill out both the front and back corner head bolts,, you only need to do the 6 bolts in the middle front and back.
@marcomolina64936 жыл бұрын
I gotta go this job on an 03 camry my brother bought for $300. The car has only 90k miles on it. I think ill just pull the whole engine out for easy access. Thanks for the video now i know that to expect. 👍
@RIKDDY5 жыл бұрын
Howd it pan out? I found out I have to do head gasket on 2004 camry 2.4. Where'd you buy the gasket kit?
@BooBooJonez4 жыл бұрын
Damn! I have a 2004 Rav4 with a coolant leak. In researching, I've also found that sometimes it's a cracked head... It has 240,000 miles and is in fairly good shape other than the antifreeze leak. I've changed many head-gaskets over the years. One time I bought a 1987 Mazda pickup that was leaking but I noticed someone had already changed the head-gasket. It was a $2000 dollar truck that I got for $200... So I took a chance. Sure enough, they didn't torque the head right. Those older first gen aluminum heads had to be re-torqued after they had been warmed up. Some of the head-bolts were just over finger tight. I put over 150,000 mile on that truck. BUT, after watching your video, I don't have the stomach to go through all of that. After 6 years and 80,000 miles, time to find a different ride. And I do like mechanicing. But I'd rather spend time building something like this ( kzbin.info/www/bejne/nYvSqIiHi9mJq5o )rather than going bananas over a vehicle that will still only ever be a tired beast at best. Thanks for posting. Very helpful...
@timdippel75174 жыл бұрын
Did this with mechanic friend years ago on 2002 Camry 4 cyl at 195000. When torking down, 4 of the 10 bolts were obviously compromised. Drilled and tapped all 10 with timecerts kit. After much googling and YouTubing I realized this was fairly common issue of bolt thread failure for this and similar year model engines. Too bad it didn’t fall under recalls. Held up for another 50000. After low engine issues I had crate engine installed. After 100000 on this engine we had same problem. Ugh. (But you must know my daughter and her lackadaisical regard for checking fluids). Blown head gasket. Oil like coffee and leaking like a Sieve. So I started to break down today so far only alternator and valve cover removed. This is certainly a major job for non-mechanic. I got nothing but time on my hands right now. Taking things apart probably fine but putting it back together again not so much. Long shot that I could get it running again but it’s going nowhere like it is now. It all sounded so familiar again as you described your ordeal. Impressive that you only did it in three or four days. With help of the mechanic it took me about an hour to drill out each hole especially with the blowing out constantly. Kudos to you
@timdippel75174 жыл бұрын
Hope to get back at it later, weather permitting. Trying to attack it by the book(Haynes). Accordingly, have to removed about everything. As was the Pink Floyd album I “wish you were here” for advice. “Dammit Jim, I’m a singer not an engineer”. Haha
@JoDaddysGarage4 жыл бұрын
lol
@Ifitfitz224 жыл бұрын
We have been in the process of putting new rings on ours... We didn't pull the timing cover but that one bolt on the timing chain guide was a pain to get out and even worse to get back in. We had to use an ease out on 2 of those head bolts too, same mistake with not using the right 12 point bit to begin with. Luckily we didnt have and thread issues though... We are a link or two out of time, because I apparently got the only 2 azfe made without any different colored links, but that's way easy to get to and redo than what we started with lol
@TheUniversalEyes5 жыл бұрын
Now try doing a Subaru head gasket replacement and you instantly understand how much better Toyota's are designed.
@JoDaddysGarage5 жыл бұрын
I believe it.
@subarutime50892 жыл бұрын
Subarus are the easiest cars to work on this just is just as bad as a cadalic.
@kevinagnew6878 Жыл бұрын
Time Serts ,are the only way to get r done 💯
@curtisjackson3010 Жыл бұрын
I have a 04 camry. 280k miles, pretty sure I have this issue. Thanks for showing me this is above me😢. I do not look forward to used car shopping
@itsjiraheta6 жыл бұрын
Wish you could have taken the time to do the how to. I have worked on Honda's but never with Toyotas. Until now, that my wife let the car re heat and I think she warped the head. She has a 2004 which I think will be the same thing as yours. But taken the whole thing a parts and trying to figure out things to get everything apart is the tedious part and time consuming. I got your email from a previous comment. I hope you don't mind if I drop a line or two to ask about things If I get stuck. I think it will take me longer as I can only work on the car at night. Oh yeah, thanks for the time you put to make the video. Really thank you for that.
@cfmpam4982303 жыл бұрын
I've ran into the same issue with the bolts before ! Came up with tacing a cable to the top of the bolt and wrapping it on a metal rod so as I turned the bolt I could apply force pulling up on the rod which pulled the bolt upwards !!! Of course replaced bolts ! But it worked very easy!!!
@warrenlucier5796 Жыл бұрын
Actually since I'm mechanically inclined and the video you made covered everything I would need to see to knock one out. Saved the engine for another 200,000 miles.
@2koolforyou886 жыл бұрын
I'm planning on doing this same job to my Camry what tools did you use to get the head bolts that where stuck out just in case I run into this same problem my Camry still runs fine no overheating but I know its leaking from the back because that black sponge thing on the intake is soaked with coolant
@JoDaddysGarage6 жыл бұрын
If I remember correctly I used a pipe wrench and a cheater pipe. Grips harder as you turn.
@oggarage34592 жыл бұрын
Great video sir, you wouldn't happen to still have this kit by any chance, I know this video is 5 years old and probably already sold it.
@JoDaddysGarage2 жыл бұрын
No, sorry.
@martinhuber4035 жыл бұрын
You're a genius, thanks. So many garbage videos online but this was great. Only helpful info here, nothing frivilous. Thanks
@fknows17 жыл бұрын
with the head bolts I'm assuming that they are stretch bolts. so need to be replaced every time. but when you pulled the bolts down to the correct tension. was it newton metres, foot pounds all degree angles stages
@JoDaddysGarage7 жыл бұрын
The bolts have a stretch tolerance, and if they meet the length requirements, they can be reused. Foot pounds is called for. There is also a 90 degree final stretch after final torque.
@fknows17 жыл бұрын
OK. didn't see the torque degrees part in the clip. even though you don't need a gauge for 90*. and thought wow they do stretch bolts different over there
@natescott9412 жыл бұрын
Bro, you’re a champ! Thanks for this!!!
@sb80532 жыл бұрын
Do you happen to know the part number on that time sert kit ?
@JoDaddysGarage2 жыл бұрын
Not anymore, I thought I mentioned it in the description for the video.
@sb80532 жыл бұрын
@@JoDaddysGarage totally bro i found it in the description ... I'm a bit slow lol thanks for the great video !!
@elsdp-45608 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU...for sharing. Nice repair...you should be receiving a life time of cold drinks from your son after this repair :)
@JoDaddysGarage8 жыл бұрын
Yeah... I'll be lucky to get a nice dinner...
@fireyourrocketts5 жыл бұрын
Interesting. Mine will be a very long comment as I will illustrate the challenges I am facing. Great video although I would have preferred see how you went about the disassembling process like others have mentioned. You state at the end this is not for the novice and that is exactly what I am when it comes to car mechanics. I do work as ATM Field Engineering which is a mechanic as well but for even more complicated machines than cars, parts are smaller and there is not so much grease and grime involved and that is that about skills set; that said, I am ready to take on my wife's Toyota Corolla 2004 Blown Head Gasket replacement and in the process will be replacing several other parts as well. Her car has a history of rolling hell; we blew the original engine 5 years ago driving it without oil; we never knew it was burning all the oil and by the time the lamp came on it was too late as we were driving back from a vacation trip from California and the car just blew a rod climbing the infamous hill after passing Baker. Family slept on the road, towed to Las Vegas next day to find out after our mechanic opened what had happened; then engine had to be replaced at the cost of $1000.00 for the engine and $700.00 labor. I drove to near Tijuana to buy the engine from a junk place right in the border; that engine is the one we now are having issues again; it was certified 62000 miles Toyota Corolla 2003 at the time we swapped, now car odometer reads 122000 miles on it but the original engine had a little over 80000 when it blew. In any case, I went to our "mechanic" this guy have been servicing this car for the last years; he does the oil changes, he installed shocks and struts and the engine swap I mentioned; he have been seen the car several times since it have been with an engine light on; he told us it was a compression issue most likely a failing gas cap; we replaced the cap buying one at the dealer but the light kept coming in, finally and without me knowing, the oil lamp was coming in intermittently and also the temperature gauge was hitting the top! by the time wife tells me and we take it again to our secretive mechanic who never mentioned any of this, he did the front brakes and inspected the issue "in depth" after I showed him a printout from the code machine from Autozone with codes P0300 showing random misfiring in cylinder one, then he comes and tells me I got blown head gasket as he found water in spark plug one; he tells me "you need another engine" AGAIN???? yes, sadly by the time all is said and done it is better to just swap the engine and the price is the same we paid years back BUT this time he has a "buddy" who does engines reconstructions and we would buy an engine from him. Did it sounded sketchy to you? so to us and then I discovered this guy never fixed our car; he swapped an engine but the car have been keeping at burning oil and overheating, just this time we did not drive it long enough and hard enough to seize the engine! So silently and with a smile, like it is done in the Mafia, we "fired" our trusted mechanic, no more of him he will never put a hand in any car I own ever. We can not afford the parts and labor, we can not afford another car, leaving us to have to fix this one and that is where I come into place as a novice. The overheating and oil burning may be caused by a series of components failing over time. Toyotas are known, I am told, to be very sensitive once the oil drops certain point and they are known for overheating if not watched carefully which is our part of the blame here; that said and since I really do not know what the real issues comes from, I think we may have a coolant issue; car have never done a proper coolant replacement before; there is not hot air coming from the vents as heater is not working, possible pointing to a bad thermostat so since I have to open the head all the way to the block, including taking off the side cover, I will be replacing the water pump, oil pump and thermostat from the side; the head of the badly burned out engine originally which I kept in my garage on an engine mount, was sent to a machine shop, inspected, resurfaced, cleaned looking like new and re-assembled with the valve done and I actually expended 3 hours disassembling the VVTi gear box for in depth cleaning of all the gunk up oil on it and assembled back together after oiling it. The timing chain I am using back the original one this time because these go for 300000 miles without having to be replaced. The price I paid for work in the head was $200.00 for almost all done on it, except the cleaning of the VVTi gear box. For the engine I also have new spark plugs, VVTi control valve, new bolts for the head, new gasket set, new serpentine belt as the one now makes a squeal noise at start, then I also have a new radiator, radiator cap and radiator hoses. We feed the engine with synthetic oil. The coils were tested by our trusted mechanic to be working ok but I may use the original ones I have on the original engine. The head in place right now in the 2003 engine that was installed in this car years ago I can not determined for how long my wife drove it overheating but it was long time. After I remove it, providing I do not strip out any of the threads!! which is what I am afraid it could happens, I will send this head for repair as well and will have it as a spare, just in case we did not learned the lesson. Just in parts alone and little gimmies my costs are already more than $1700.00! but I am making sure the issues are taken care of. Only time will tell if it is a failed enterprise or if I am capable of fixing this car and have it rolling for another 150000 miles! -- The car had as I mentioned front brakes done, rear adjusted recently, cosmetically is ok, not bend or dings, the clutch is ok still, has performance rims and tires which makes it look trendy, a deep engine bay detail and a deep inside detail will bring it to life. In its current state, Toyota dealer offered $300.00 for trade in and our trusted mechanic said he would have buy it for $800.00 - If I succeed with the repair and cleaning once done it is around the $4-5K range. It is a Toyota after all! I have to mention, I also own a Toyota Tacoma which is sitting next to this one in the drive way; it has 228000 miles on it, engine never been opened or work in, also standard, it has not run for the past couple years but I will never sell it for as long as I can hold on to it. With my project, once I open the engine, I hope i do not have to use a kit like the one you show here and I am also hoping the block is in good shape. I was told these blocks before 2014 are all made of cast iron instead of all aluminum as the modern ones are now. We have a Town and Country with lifetime warranty from Mopar and just recently already had the engine replaced because of a bad bearing and it only had 60000 miles when they did it! so that right there gives me hopes for this Toyota and that i am doing the right thing instead of going with the offer to just replace the engine again. Thanks for reading this long post and thank you for your video!
@ucakpan4 жыл бұрын
Well, sir, since I just found your comment, I should ask: how is your Toyota Corolla doing after the repair?
@fireyourrocketts4 жыл бұрын
@@ucakpan LOL, well I have not worked on it since..engine in back together the lower block and head but still in the garage, i guess it will be done one day :)
@ucakpan4 жыл бұрын
@@fireyourrocketts, this is now classic car restoration territory.
@davebrittain92168 жыл бұрын
Are those inserts just helicoils? I used them for my little race built 75 Honda civic for the head bolts and according to the info the helicoils can give it a higher tear out rating than the stock threaded block.
@JoDaddysGarage8 жыл бұрын
Not heli-coil. These are solid inserts.
@acoow8 жыл бұрын
The previous generation of Toyota's 2.4L was a freaking tank. Except for the oil pump gasket developing a leak about every 75-100 thousands miles, as long as the owner takes the time to do scheduled oil/filter changes, he'll easily get 300,000 miles on it. The oil pump isn't really that big of a deal, however. Since it and the water pump are driven by the timing belt, changing all three at the same time at 75,000 will virtually eliminate oil pump leak issues.
@ferndog14612 жыл бұрын
Toyota moved to the 2.5 L engine in ~2007. That engine doesn't have as many headaches.
@IBLOCALS2 жыл бұрын
Great video. Did it still hold up with the timeserts repair?
@JoDaddysGarage2 жыл бұрын
It did. He's still driving it. Almost 300,000 miles on it now.
@BooBooJonez4 жыл бұрын
I have a question: Do you think the leak was due to the bad threads and not a breach in the head-gasket?
@JoDaddysGarage4 жыл бұрын
The threads failing caused the gasket to fail. This has been a common problem on these engines.
@bryancorts53892 жыл бұрын
Good shit! Thanks for saving me a headache 😃
@jetaimesolomon9943 Жыл бұрын
So the car was saved?
@JoDaddysGarage Жыл бұрын
Yep. And he’s still driving it today.
@billdougan40224 жыл бұрын
If the head bolts would have been replaced and retorqued at 140,000 miles, do you think that would have prevented the stripped threads at 200k miles? The Cressida had the problem of head bolts not being tightened at the factory causing blown head gaskets. Thanks. Great video.
@JoDaddysGarage4 жыл бұрын
I don't think that would help.
@jasonrue8195 Жыл бұрын
Was the coolant leaking from the rear?
@JoDaddysGarage Жыл бұрын
I believe so.
@MILTONQUE2 жыл бұрын
Any issues after the repair?
@JoDaddysGarage2 жыл бұрын
None. It has gone another 70,000 miles, and still running.
@djbobbyd39856 жыл бұрын
Can i ask you one more question? What were the symptoms you were having? I know you said at the beginning that you change the valve cover and you noticed you were leaking antifreeze, was there any other symptoms?
@JoDaddysGarage6 жыл бұрын
I think it started running hot.
@kennethbryan37383 жыл бұрын
@@JoDaddysGarage hello,i have a 2006 camry with 1AZ-FE engine with 245k miles,it stalls sometimes on cold start,i think the valve seals are bad,but i am not confident enough to have a shop work on it as its hasn't been loosed before..is there anything i should look out for?looking forward to your reply
@mcsheisty19703 жыл бұрын
Would I have the same problem? I’m not leaking anywhere I just keep finding oil in my spark plugs causing misfires.
@JoDaddysGarage3 жыл бұрын
Unlikely. Probably a valve cover gasket. I think I did a video on that as well.
@philipoien75623 жыл бұрын
@SLT7 you are linking two separate and unrelated problems. Spark plugs can not have oil in them! Either the cylinder or the spark plug/igniter hole in the valve cover, or both, are where the oil is. This is not semantics. @Jo Daddy's Garage assumes the spark plug/igniter hole with his response, because oil in the cylinder would cause obvious smoke in the exhaust, an oil fouled spark plug (not mentioned), and eventually a misfire, because it takes time to oil foul a spark plug. Oil in the spark plug/igniter hole will not cause a misfire. Oil is not a conductor of electricity, and so even if the boot of the igniter is damaged there is no way for the high voltage to fail to go down the spark plug and jump the gap. Oil in the spark plug/igniter hole IS because of a failed valve cover gasket because the spark plug holes are isolated from the valve/cam shaft area by the little gasket rings that are the center section of the valve cover gasket. . . Misfires are something else entirely! . . . AND why I am here. . . Misfires are no easy diagnosis. To start a misfire diagnosis, you should know for certain from an actual code reader that you have a misfire, or misfires, and on which cylinders. On a Coil on Plug or "COP" ignition system, like the 2AZ-FE engine, first start by swapping coils to different cylinders to see if the misfire moves. If the misfire moves, the coil/igniter is the problem. If not, things get more complicated. It could be a bad ground, bad primary side power wire, bad sense wire on the Toyota ignition systems, bad ECM, or . . . a head gasket leaking coolant into a cylinder or cylinders causing the coolant (an electrical conductor) to short out the spark plugs of the affected cylinders. (My issue) If someone wants to DIY a misfire diagnosis before tearing into wiring and electrical issues (a wise idea, especially on a Toyota), invest in a compression tester, a cooling system pressure tester kit, and a cylinder leak down kit. There are plenty of affordable and functional Chinese kits out there. . . In my situation, the compression pressure was slightly lower on the #4 cylinder. . . Next I did a leak down test, and was able to hear air bubbling in the coolant over-flow tank. . . This verified a head gasket leak. . . Finally I did a pressure test on the cooling system and found a small amount of coolant in the #3 cylinder and much more in the #4 cylinder. . . That's what brought me here to this video. @Jo Daddy's Garage thanks for the excellent general information video.
@mcsheisty19703 жыл бұрын
Well help me understand why I would be misfiring on all cylinders and all of the ignitor holes are full of oil? I understand what you mean when you say the oil is another isolated issue but to say that the oil isn’t causing my misfire would be a little far fetched.
@mcsheisty19703 жыл бұрын
@@philipoien7562 ^
@philipoien75623 жыл бұрын
@@mcsheisty1970 Well, you don't have to take my word for anything. You could Google whether oil conducts electricity, or not, and then you would be more informed than you were before your research. You could also inspect each of your coil on plug igniter boots and verify if they fit snugly over the spark plugs, as they should, which is the physical barrier to any spark leakage and the intended purpose for the boots, and THIS simple inspection would eliminate the oil and misfire linkage that you propose. You could also Google misfiring on all cylinders. Or, you could fix a really obvious problem first, that being igniter holes "full" of oil (REALLY? Are you serious? "FULL"?) and once you fixed that problem, find out if you still have misfiring on all cylinders. You might even Google the purpose for Coil on Plug ignition systems, and maybe find out something else. . . I'll let you know that there are a multitude of problems that can cause misfiring on all cylinders. For example, a bad intake air leak, which can come from any opening in the intake air path after the Mass Air Flow sensor (cracked intake air boot, loose or missing air boot hose clamps, disconnected vacuum lines, etc.) WILL cause massive over-fueling which WILL cause misfiring on all cylinders. . . However, as things relate to this video on head gaskets, and as I stated in my initial comment, coolant in any cylinder, OR in ALL will cause misfiring. This specific Toyota engine has a design flaw with the head bolt holes in the engine block which usually leads to failed threads primarily in the 3 middle back head bolt holes. If all 3 holes have lost their tension, you will almost certainly have coolant in several, if not all cylinders and have misfiring on all cylinders with coolant leaks. Have you actually read the engine codes? What you could actually do, instead of pounding out responses on your keypad, is get and use the diagnostic tools I mentioned in my first comment (OBD2 scan tool like the BlueDriver, compression tester, coolant pressure tester, and leak down tester) and figure out what is ACTUALLY going on inside your engine, INSTEAD OF ARGUING WITH anyone about whether the "oil in your spark plugs" as you said is causing A MISFIRE, which is ACTUALLY different from misfiring on all cylinders. . . I was trying to help you out by pointing out some challenges with your description of your problem as well as with your linking of the oil and misfiring, AND point you in the direction of the typical failure on these 2AZ-FE engines which does lead to misfires, NOT ARGUE WITH YOU! Take Care and Good Luck with your engine.
@coachcard73867 жыл бұрын
jo daddy do you think its possible to take the head off wothout removing the timing cover? thanks very much
@JoDaddysGarage7 жыл бұрын
I don't think that's possible.
@leroywallona19503 күн бұрын
It's possible but will be junk after
@AshyLarryTM Жыл бұрын
I have 3 of these Camrys. Believe me when I say you would have saved 3 or 4 hours if you just pulled the engine. You could have also changed out all of the seals and gaskets on the engine and done the piston and rings upgrade while you were at it in the same time it took you to do the head gasket with the engine in place.
@JoDaddysGarage Жыл бұрын
😂 Maybe travel back in time to let me know….
@Chasred-ml4hm2 жыл бұрын
Weld that 10mm allen or your torx socket to the top of the bolt head and be done with it.
@trini_boi24144 жыл бұрын
I finally found my problem..the head cover gasket was bad and was leaking oil on my spark plugs and was getting a misfire thank goodness it was just the valve cover gasket I had to replace...btw nice tho
@moneymac28647 жыл бұрын
$200 for the kit would be fair $450 is robbery...other than that this was a great video...takes a lot of balls to tackles this job
@peterskowronski62487 жыл бұрын
Good video, thanks for the info. Im doing the very same job on the same car. Can I ask how you got the serpentine idler off? There must be a trick. Thanks
@JoDaddysGarage7 жыл бұрын
Sorry. I can't picture it in my head.
@brianwright86457 жыл бұрын
Peter Skowronski loosen the idler bolt and pull down easy if breaks like mine go to eBay 24.00 dollars I found new o e not146.00 like orellys wNts
@brianwright86457 жыл бұрын
man parts are real cheap on eBay or parts geek.com wright down part # before u order dales clerk won't like it they work on commission
@kenc23863 жыл бұрын
I believe all head bolts are what they call torque-to-yield. In other words, replace them on every job. Apparently the timing chain guide and tensioner were ok. Btw, was that after work or all day for 3 1/2 days?
@JoDaddysGarage3 жыл бұрын
If I remember, it was after work.
@TheOpenAirGarage8 жыл бұрын
I like videos like this. You did a real thorough job on this repair. Awesome job.
@ednabraden4068 жыл бұрын
Mr jo daddy bitting off more than I can chew cool vid THX
@roadrash19817 жыл бұрын
Great vid I have to do the same repair ' anyone know where I can get one of these kits in west Australia , cheapest I have come across is nearly $1200 😭 and that's from the other side of the country!
@JoDaddysGarage7 жыл бұрын
I don't guess you can order from Wise tools here in the US?
@jaycarl15625 жыл бұрын
Nice job!
@scottjones7616 Жыл бұрын
Great details in videos
@ricardopena24633 жыл бұрын
it really helps thank you
@kyleturner39995 жыл бұрын
Is that an interference engine?
@JoDaddysGarage5 жыл бұрын
Not sure.
@davebrunner12725 жыл бұрын
yes
@redeagle27935 жыл бұрын
the 2azfe is not an interference engine.
@Lifesituations80004 жыл бұрын
Are those engines interference or non interference?
@JoDaddysGarage4 жыл бұрын
Not sure.
@djbobbyd39856 жыл бұрын
Unbelievable job you did on this video. Very educational. I have the exact same year/vehicle and it has the same problem. In my case, its not worth doing this job on my vehicle. Too much work. I have a question for you. In your opinion do you think the bars leak head gasket sealer would work on this type of head gasket leak? I know it's not the right thing to do, but I can't afford to have the head gasket replaced. Any help you can give me would be appreciated.
@JoDaddysGarage6 жыл бұрын
I tried that stuff on a different vehicle. The results weren't very good.
@djbobbyd39856 жыл бұрын
I was also thinking about trying to remove the valve cover and tightening the 2 back bolts, but their are probably stripped due to the factory default with the aluminum block.
@JoDaddysGarage6 жыл бұрын
Yep. Common problem. Not likely to hold.
@djbobbyd39856 жыл бұрын
Ok... Thanks for getting back to me so quickly and answering my questions
@MisterDivineAdVenture4 жыл бұрын
To be avoided. Thank you Mr. Canary. I actually find the Nissan Truck based models to be a surprising best, as far as ease of making those high mileage preventative repairs and repairs - Toyota is a nightmare (in spite of reputation) and Ford and GM are recurring bad dreams..
@thathsavanhsivilaythong7 жыл бұрын
Did you end up selling the kit?
@JoDaddysGarage7 жыл бұрын
Yes. It's sold.
@jeremiahbrumfield36627 жыл бұрын
Was it running hot???
@JoDaddysGarage7 жыл бұрын
Yes, and it was losing antifreeze at the back of the engine.
@Mojo275642 жыл бұрын
This looks like a nightmare not for the average joe
@raaah8 жыл бұрын
well you did a great job I I just have one question you have the timing chain out why did you not replace it even if the car only has 30,000 miles on it because I have to go to again to change that time to when and if you have to just saying
@JoDaddysGarage8 жыл бұрын
Good question. I had considered it, but it was in excellent condition, and I didn't really see the need. If it were a belt, I'd have changed it.
@raaah8 жыл бұрын
either way excellent work keep it up
@acoow8 жыл бұрын
I'm glad car companies are starting to go back to timing chains. I know a guy who calls them "time bombs" instead of timing chains.
@michael88h6 жыл бұрын
Go figure i watched it 2 years to the day is when I watched it.
@eddnhaila38953 жыл бұрын
well done.
@JoDaddysGarage8 жыл бұрын
Link to the supplier: wiseautotools.com/time-sert-2200-universal-head-bolt-thread-repair-kit-m11x1-5mm/
@kusouyarou11107 жыл бұрын
Great video. I am working on this right now and this video is the one that helped the most. I have one question though, how did you get the head alignment dowels back in after you drilled and tapped everything? I am worried that the dowel would be too narrow to do its job after making the hole wider. Ok, looks like the alignment dowel is much wider than the holes you will be drilling. It looked like it tapered inward when i first looked at it. A large screw extractor from harbor freight will pull it with ease. Harder to get the dowel off the extractor, lol.
@jamescarmichael94017 жыл бұрын
Great video thank you
@billstevenson73818 жыл бұрын
Great challenge for you, bro! Every now and then a good puzzle helps you to think and focus. I'm wondering, I guess the head bolts a a bottoming thread. Also, is there a minimum thickness you can machine from the head surface, without valve to piston clearance issues? What about timing chain tensioner, did you replace them? How about syncing the overhead cams, are there alignment holes to hold the cams in place? Does Toyota offer a remanufactured head assembly complete? And finally, are there shims for the camshaft to the valve stems that have to be installed for specific thickness? Great video, man! Sorry for asking so many questions, but I'm sure I'll end up doing one, and I'd rather hear from and intelligent human being before I dive in. Thanks again!
@JoDaddysGarage8 жыл бұрын
Bottoming thread? Not sure what you're asking. The threads run to the bottom of the holes. Not sure on the min thickness. The machine shop was very familiar with the repair, and I didn't ask. I'm sure it was very little material removed. I did not replace the tensioner. As I went through the assembly, I did check the tensioner, and it appeared to function properly. As far as cams, I did my own thing to index them and ensure timing. I'm sure Toyota offers a head, but I did not plan to replace it, so I didn't even check. There are no shims for the cam shafts that I know of. The cam lobes interact with the lifters which then interact with the valves. I was amazed at how little wear was present on the cam lobes. Other than the amount of time involved, it wasn't that bad. I did get frustrated with the tight spaces, and having to take so many parts off to make it happen.
@thomaswatson66616 жыл бұрын
Bill Stevenson a
@vaman865 жыл бұрын
excellent!
@kirkchapman65563 жыл бұрын
You never said in your video where you bought the tool from cost $450
@JoDaddysGarage3 жыл бұрын
Links in description and top comments posted.
@leonardgilbreath90048 жыл бұрын
good repair an hope you sale that kit .
@bw55598 жыл бұрын
I'm interested in the kit!
@JoDaddysGarage8 жыл бұрын
Email me. jodaddysgarage@gmail.com
@itsjiraheta6 жыл бұрын
did you end up selling the kit?
@265chevy8 жыл бұрын
nice work
@rustyrods85358 жыл бұрын
Nice job .
@bahdooe29634 жыл бұрын
It’s a ticking
@bigboy69691004 жыл бұрын
That motor was burning oil after 130,000 miles why
@JoDaddysGarage8 жыл бұрын
This guy does an excellent job showing the repair process using the time-sert tool: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fYmogHStaNajbK8
@whateverz-8766 жыл бұрын
Triple square 12 point, but...12 mm..? 14 mm..? Great vid otherwise...
@samohtdivad8 жыл бұрын
dam! or darnit ..dadgumit..good save man..
@JoDaddysGarage8 жыл бұрын
I may or may not have used similar words....
@tolpacourt4 жыл бұрын
Only a fool would pay $6,000 for a 2003 Camry, let alone pay $6,000 for a new engine. Well, unless the car had 30,000 miles and was previously owned by Scotty Kilmer.
@JoDaddysGarage4 жыл бұрын
lol. We bought the car in 2007. It only had about 80,000 miles on it.
@ariffyusoff97333 жыл бұрын
yo gang...
@leonardodelgado1113Күн бұрын
Yuuup Toyota caskets suck man or head bolts Honda don’t have this problem😔
@nicparker38096 жыл бұрын
when you realize you are not a mechanic.
@JoDaddysGarage6 жыл бұрын
It's not for everyone.
@YourName-vh1nu2 жыл бұрын
Bs on the pic
@JoDaddysGarage2 жыл бұрын
Why is that?
@YourName-vh1nu2 жыл бұрын
It implies step by step, and you click on it then after your realize it's just talking you read the title
@JDMJACOB16 жыл бұрын
How's it running?
@JoDaddysGarage6 жыл бұрын
Like a champ. No issues at all.
@JDMJACOB16 жыл бұрын
@@JoDaddysGarage Thanks! Have any tips? I'm going to take this in the coming month
@JoDaddysGarage6 жыл бұрын
Just take your time, and keep things clean. Label where things go. I've been doing this stuff a long time, so I'm used to just doing it my way.