Sir you are a dying breed..not only do you know your facts ..but you are quite a craftsman
@paulbakovic74755 жыл бұрын
Thank you for being an honest mechanic and showing people what it looks like when a hack or no care is given..
@2541968joey6 жыл бұрын
Really enjoy driving my '68 XKE. After installing the EDIS ignition system, no dizzy the engine really came alive.
@robharding40283 жыл бұрын
I can appreciate a good motor engineer ! Thank god for honest workmen.
@LanceisLawson6 жыл бұрын
I've built around 30 XK engines and there is no magic needed to build them. Simple common sense as with any careful rebuild will get you there. If there is one thing you should always do is have the engine internals balanced prior to reassembly., Makes a world of difference and adds free horsepower.
@videomaniac1085 жыл бұрын
I did that on an Austin Healey Sprite engine that I had rebuilt and it did make a noticeable difference in how much more smoothly the engine ran.
@diamonddog2575 жыл бұрын
What do you think is the best overbore for the 5.3 Jag V12 ? Would you also improve the compression ... or .... ? thx
@videomaniac1085 жыл бұрын
That engine is a work of art, so beautiful.
@MrGGPRI5 жыл бұрын
Back in the day I was trying to get rid of the tapping of one valve on a straight 8 engine but after adjusting the valves over and over, failed.. Frustrated, I watched it run for awhile and noticed it was synchronized with the fan pulley; further inspection revealed the belt had a loose cord and it was hitting some tin cover and creating the tapping-- school of hard knocks..
@mattsta19645 жыл бұрын
With the amount of money sloshing around in the classic car market these days, it's become a minefield having things likes engine rebuilds done. I would always elect to do engine rebuilds myself and delegate any specialist work like crank regrinds etc. At least that way, you can see precisely what standard of work is being undertaken, unlike a full engine rebuild that can disguise a multitude of short cuts and shoddy workmanship. And apart from that, you get a huge amount of satisfaction doing as much of the work yourself as is possible and you learn an awful lot about how engines are designed and put together. Great videos though Nigel. A pleasure to watch
@oldschool19936 жыл бұрын
We use to use Corvair pistons in our Jag rebuilds- same dome, same pin size and same deck height and better quality than stock. BTW, that ticking sounds a lot like the common problem of the tappet guide coming loose from the head
@panther1055 жыл бұрын
Always amazes me how people find out these facts. How could anyone image they would be the same? Genius!!
@craigpennington12516 жыл бұрын
Those valves do sound a bit tappy. Maybe when hot they get quiet done a bit. With the Webers, I'm thinking high performance meaning higher lift cams. Exhaust note sounds very good.
@malcolmyoung78666 жыл бұрын
Lovely, great job. FYR Fox and CVRT (Scorpion/Scimitar/Sabre etc) used the J60 4.2 litre Jaguar. Probably rebuild many times as well during it's service life.
@briggsquantum6 жыл бұрын
I've rebuilt enough engines to know that you do exceptionally good work. Very nicely done - and those carbs are adjusted perfectly! Thanks for posting.
@deeremeyer17496 жыл бұрын
You can tell the carbs are adjusted perfectly just by listening to it and not seeing, hearing and feeling how it runs under load? Really? Even with it sounding like a corn sheller?
@briggsquantum6 жыл бұрын
Yes I am that talented and skilled.
@deeremeyer17496 жыл бұрын
Better get your ears checked then because its spitting and coughing noticeably at idle right before and after it gets "revved up". Which isn't surprising for a an engine running on a test stand. I'm sure he knows that tuning/synchronizing a multi-carb engine with no air filters installed and the engine not in the vehicle is pretty much a waste of time and just had things adjusted "close enough" to get it fired up and leak-checked and make sure it wasn't going to grenade again before sticking it back in the car. Which if I'm not mistaken on a Jaguar is a royal pain in the ass. They look like the only vehicles ever made where removing and installing the engine requires more labor than overhauling/rebuilding it.
@briggsquantum6 жыл бұрын
I have no doubt that working on these cars, if you are ever so fortunate, would be a "pain in the ass" for you. It's entirely possible that you would spend more time re and re-ing the engine than rebuilding it, if you were actually capable of either. One day you will move out of the basement, and get some real-world experience. I get the engines out and don't even remove the hood. Go figure that one out.
@jacquespoirier90716 жыл бұрын
the jaguar engine is one of the best built automotive engine so a sloppy rebuilding technique is much more apparent adn the result is much more questionnable.
@keithturner35808 ай бұрын
Some years ago I bought an S3 3.4L XJ6 it had a rebuilt engine - done by a reputable firm in South Wales. at about 6000 miles it started to big end knock! Determined to trace the problem I removed the engine & dismantled the bottom end. This engine had the con rod bolts fixed with castellated nuts & split pins. The problem, simple they had used plated split pins this can make the metal brittle (always use plain pins) the result was the pieces of the broken split pins had been 'hoovered' up by the oil pickup (no proper filter?) passed through the oil pump cracking the gears then jammed the relief valve open dumping most of the oil back into the sump. The sudden loss of oil pressure damaged the big end bearings. Hence the fatal knock. The repair cost was too much for an old car luckily a local Swansea Jag specialist had a good second hand engine which I fitted & it more than lasted all the time I used the car. All I can say is if you rebuild a 3.4 engine use the special nuts fitted to 4.2L engines & never use plated split pins in any high vibration situation!
@robertmaybeth34343 жыл бұрын
40 years experience? And I thought I had experience, this guy has forgotten more than I ever knew. Until a back injury ended my career I worked automotive for almost that long. I'd take my car to this guy, if he'd even want to work on it - you don't get that much experience by taking every job that comes your way
@johnwattdotca4 жыл бұрын
I just hafta say I was "accidentally sold" the first Jaguar XKE sold in Canada, in 1962. I bought it with 26,000 miles, everything as new, in 1971. It went over 160 m.p.h. I'm lucky to be alive. Bay-an-uck-let, blessings on you.
@jamesstrickland45104 жыл бұрын
John, can you email me about your car please at js438847@gmail.com?
@deepindercheema49175 жыл бұрын
Shocking! What a complete rip off. Thanks for making the case .
@KJs5815 жыл бұрын
Hence why I do all mine myself. My first Jag engine was a 69 XJ6 in 1988 that was a 2.8 and had a 4.2 transplanted. I got it that way because then I'd know what I was getting. Someone gave me a 350 Chev to put in "after I got sick of that stupid Jag engine." The owner had had it to a professional and gave up in desperation after "they had tried everything." The car came with ream of receipts from said highly regarded Jag place that had done everything from new head gaskets to "locking up the fan clutch." Hang on - alarm bells. So - a "professional" is happy for a fan designed to go no faster than 2,000 RPM to run at full engine speed? THAT is just dangerous. And made me question their knowledge. If the car is overheating over 30mph, that usually eliminates the fan. I tried the quick fix. Removed head - was perfect. Replaced head gasket = overheating - pressure into cooling water. Removed head, and scuffing on front cylinder. Hmmmm. Closer inspection revealed a crack in the liner. Had to pull engine - replace liner - so I replaced them all. I did everything except the press in liners and hone them. That piston was scuffed as well, so replaced all pistons/rings/bearings. When I pulled the engine apart, it had cut thin shim in with the pallet shims, and FULL of silastic - very poor. So much "patch up butchery." Once I put it back together, engine then ran PERFECTLY (with new fan clutch - they destroyed the other one to lock it up) - EXCEPT would miss on hard acceleration. I checked everything (including the receipts from the "experts" that 3 times tuned and road tested the carbies) and found that the car had 2.8 needles in the carbs. Early XJ6 has same size carbs for 2.8 and 4.2 but different needles. Right needles = perfect. Hang on - HOW did they "tune and road test" 3 times with the wrong needles? I could feel it was "wrong" after 200 yards, and I don't see myself as an "expert". Car was perfect for years until I sold it. I now have another Jag (69, had since 2000) and won't let anyone else touch it. Same deal, guy near my Dad has an E type, and says it is hard to start, "but that is just Jags". I ask if anyone has looked at it; he says "Oh yeah, specialist tunes and overhauls once a year, just got it back.............. but they are all like that." Mine doesn't get driven for months at a time - starts within 5 seconds ALWAYS - so again, I question his "expert". Biggest problem is aftermarket parts. I waited for rim tapes/strips for my wire wheels - came from a US specialist - far too big = useless. Ended up making my own. I patched up my Stag for years (use existing blocks, hand select second hand/old bits) and hadn't done too bad, as did 330,000 kms over 20 years, including 7 cross Australia trips Perth/Melbourne return (7,000 kms return). Always in summer ( :-) ) and at times was 48 degrees out in the desert. Cruise on 130 kmh all day, as no one out there. I eventually "bit the bullet" and built a rebuilt engine. Wished that I hadn't. Some parts were so butchered. I have replaced/refitted/remodelled so much of it that within the next few years, I will get my old block and hand select some old pistons and the like and rebuild an engine that I will be far happier with. I use the Stag at least 2/3 times a week to go to the shops and the like, so it has to be smooth and reliable. With my hand selected "old" parts, it will be. Any "new" Stag parts are made in India now, and I have bought so many of them - looked at them - got my old ones out, get the verniers, make one good one out of a few. Just did that with oil pump on the Stag. I hear even many suppliers have quit using the Indian pumps for Triumphs and recon old pumps, as the new ones are just no good. Fair enough, there are "Indian parts" and "Indian parts" - but how do you know what they are like until you try, and my experience not good - at least with Triumph bits. I have more success with my "boxes of old bits". Again, each to their own. And there are some of those parts creeping in for all cars. I am lucky I am able to keep my old things going; but I am so wary I don't trust anyone to touch my stuff. Sad but true. If I ever start to think of farming some engine stuff out; I have people who say "I know a bloke and he..." so I have a conversation with them......... then come home and do it myself. Maybe I am too picky. Each to their own. But if I am able to make a Stag drive to Melbourne and back 7 years in a row in temps up 48 degrees (extreme, normally only 30 to 40 degrees out there) and cover 330,000 kms in one of the hottest countries on earth........... and can drive my Stag OR Jaguar around here on mid 30's days) I am happy doing it the way I am. :-)
@levitate10785 жыл бұрын
i've had cow boy parts before but never indian, thanks for the heads up, i'll stick with the british and recon when needed
@jeffreyprice7736 жыл бұрын
I can hear a tappet click, I worked on jags since 1963 until 2011, i sugest re checking the clearances , cheers from uk.
@GrowthCurveMarketing5 жыл бұрын
Yes - hideous click/lash...
@nigelboycott30005 жыл бұрын
@@MevRB19 Hi I should have pointed out that I didnt have the inlet manifold or carbs for this engine from the owner. I simply fitted the Webers and manifold in order to run the engine. As they were only slave fitted I didn't intend to carry out any kind of setting up of the carbs.
@nigelboycott30005 жыл бұрын
@@GrowthCurveMarketing Hi I can assure you the tappets were not noisy. It's simply the way they get picked up by the microphone
@paulfitzgerald75135 жыл бұрын
JpHDev Make sure you know all the facts before making yourself look a prat, this man has built more jaguar engines than you and knows exactly what he is doing. You aren’t fit to tie his boot laces...
@arttafil67925 жыл бұрын
jeffrey price sounds like just 1 valve
@dinos71856 жыл бұрын
If you watch one of his videos an engine he rebuilt it ran so smoothly you'd thought it was the most blue printed and balanced engines ever built...
@deeremeyer17496 жыл бұрын
You mean those "premium" and "high-performance" Jag engines aren't the most blue printed and balanced engines ever built?
@kevinderop2 ай бұрын
Sir, thank you for those very educational films. just a question ...it is a long shot, but who doesn’t dare, doesn’t … I have a 1967 S1 OTS working perfectly, but the engine in it is a bit to “young” (7E10711-9). I am looking for the engine 7E11043-9 … it is a long shot, but you did not come across this one, did you ? thank you
@pedrosilvaslva26255 жыл бұрын
You need to contact an engine specialist if you want to rebuild an engine with guarantee. I have rebuilded hundreds of them, no one had a single problem, after i rebuild or repair it. Its not just assembly, you need check everything and test everything, becuase after assembly your are not going to test anything! It is always a machinist job.And a good engine has an unestimated value. Do it well, save thousands of bills.-
@jameswarbrick91685 жыл бұрын
rebuilt ,your having a problem there
@englishmaninfrance6615 жыл бұрын
Well , it sounds good , but I can hear a clicking as well
@alanphillips48513 жыл бұрын
You are hearing a single tappet. Its very difficult to get these all perfect because of stack up tolerances. You tend to air on the side of caution, which is safer on the motor than the clearence being too small. Because you have to take the cams off to change the shims, by the time you re-torque them all back up, inevitably at least one one is little noisy. Taking it apart again to correct that oftens shifts it to another one. I found the best way was to set the torque wrench up at the correct setting, loosen and and re-tighten the bolts before even taking the initial clearance measurements to see what changes are needed. I also suspect this motor started out with the later 'emission era' cams that require a larger clearence and was fitted with the earlier more sporty cams or even an upgraded cam which changes the clearences substantially which means a lot of iterations of measuring and re-shimming. Also it has a set of DCOE's on it, so its not unusualto set the clearences a bit wider. I've never heard an XK engine where no tappets were audible, it would scare me if I did. My own included. I have gone through the upgrade process myself of going to the earlier cams on my own S2 E-Type , so I'm aware of the challenges involved. Long answer to say, thats sounds perfectly great !! :)
@christopherward50655 жыл бұрын
Older cars need tuning and adjustment several times a year. Without someone with genuine expertise there will be inadequate fixing rather than actual restoration to spec using correct tools, know-how and care. It is easy to be ripped-off by shady characters. Experts can name their price and give you a fantastic service and repair crooks can spoil a good piece of engineering beyond economic repair. If you have deep pockets some crooks will keep you on a leash until you catch them out. A good Jag engine is terrific and when you see people restore one properly you really get it about why those cars were great historic racing cars and remain iconic pieces of engineering.
@donmoore77855 жыл бұрын
Unbelievable the short cuts and shoddy work that someone did.
@JLMEALER2000 Жыл бұрын
I could be wrong, but I do recall tracing the 'tappet or lifter ticking sound' in more than one engine, my XK straight-six being one of them, it turned out the noise was actually from oil 'popping' as it exited the top of the pushrods. Of course, one engine had very old thick, gummed up, black, very dirty oil with probably 100K miles from the last oil change in a '72 351C pulled out of an LTD Squire Station Wagon and the 4.2 from an old XJ6 that should never have been started without an oil change since it had been opened up to the weather for a few years. Once the oil was changed to a Castrol variation, the popping stopped and no bubbles from the straight six. Sure, sure... there could have been moisture in the oil or something, but the classic lifter noise stopped with an oil change just as it can easily begin after an oil change. ANYHOW.... I'm done with the rant. Great video and you seem extremely down to earth and straight forward with your discussion. Something that is rarely seen these days. No dumb jokes. No idiotic sports talk. No innuendoes.
@nkelly.99 ай бұрын
Correct. You are wrong. These engines do not have push rods. Oh dear.
@julesnw36 жыл бұрын
Looks like a great job, but why does it sound so tappety? Or am I hearing something else ticking?
@XKEngineSpecialist6 жыл бұрын
Yes, after uploading this video I noticed that the sound of the engine running makes it sound like the engine is tapping. This wasn't the case! I think the acoustics of the shed it was in paired with the microphone caused this.
@jacquespoirier90716 жыл бұрын
it,s probably due to the sound recording characteristic of the camera, the tapping sound really exists but it's blended to the engine running sound so the human ear does not really notice it but the camera does
@rondyechannel13996 жыл бұрын
I've noticed this on lots of engines. Something in the electronics amplifies the tappet sounds!
@LanceisLawson6 жыл бұрын
It is almost impossible to eliminate all tappet noise from an XK engine especially on the older 3.4 and 3.8 engines. The later 4.2 XJ-6 engines were a bit easier to make totally quiet.
@hpt086 жыл бұрын
Reminded me of my x308 engine. Was hoping to read the solution!
@volantadroite11 ай бұрын
Hi sir. You have the sport camshaft? type piper 270? Or camshaft type origine ? Thanks you
@michaelreilly1310esq2 ай бұрын
Generally speaking with such light usage and mileage why do these engines need to be rebuilt so frequently?
@andrewspence31715 жыл бұрын
There are many Classic car engine builders , the most expensive, who operate from swish premises, and have clever talk, often are the worst. I could tell you a story about a very well known Ferrari specialist who made a terrible mess of a 3 litre V12 out of a SWB berlinetta. I could have bought a small car for the amount of their bill. The owner paid up, but never went back there again.
@Hvtesla5 жыл бұрын
Original engine rebuild was by Laurel & Hardy maybe?
@graemewilliams13085 жыл бұрын
Nah, three stooges.
@specialforces1013 жыл бұрын
The exhaust note on reving sounds great but it's still very noisy on idle. Clearly not a perfect rebuild but doubtlessly better than the earlier bodge.
@michaelclark28405 жыл бұрын
Strewth, what a bodge job from the previous rebuilders. Silicon under the tappett shims..WT*!!!
@brit10664 жыл бұрын
Last person I ever heard say STREWTH, was my father, bless him. He died 30 years ago at 91. Best wishes.
@bigdogbob845 Жыл бұрын
That is a beauty to say the least, but I do hear a rather noticeable / unusual Tic-Tic-Tic sound towards the end of the video, is that normal?
@parttimetourist12 сағат бұрын
I would love someone to tell me why Jaguar six-cylinder heads have only 2 valves per cylinder instead of four like most performance engines
@iambraindead15 жыл бұрын
Tappets are quite noisy for a rebuilt engine, don't you think?
@archygrey90933 жыл бұрын
Its just the microphone, in the description he states that its much quieter in real life.
@joachimkylhammar50843 жыл бұрын
what is that ticking sound i and my father did rebuild an 4.2 litre e type engine and it was quiet no ticking sound so much for an XK engine specialist oh this engine is fine it just have an ticking sound that e type engines properly restored Don't have
@gogogeedus6 жыл бұрын
I suppose adjusting the tappet is a big job ? do these have the buckets and shims?
@thecamperDK5 жыл бұрын
Shims UNDER the buckets.. off with the cams lol
@TheEulerID5 жыл бұрын
That's not an amateur build, it's a cowboy build. A rather different thing.
@howardroberts6862 Жыл бұрын
What Happened to the cowboy that Spoilt the engine and even said they had fitted a lip seal when the rope seal was still there.
@arodrigues28435 жыл бұрын
Webers 45 DCOE's??? Great conversion.!! I would like to install them in my Mk. 2,(3.8Lt).
@dallasbrady9675 жыл бұрын
A Rodrigues you are going to have fun putting that lot in a mk11. I put three 2” SUs on mine, that took some shoehorning.
@diamonddog2575 жыл бұрын
I've seen six Webers on XKE
@dallasbrady9675 жыл бұрын
Battery in the boot. Move the brake master cylinder assembly over. Remove vibration spacer/o ring assembly. Big hole in inner guard for the front carb, boxed in of course. Squat air filters. V V fast, V V thirsty, unexpected wheel spin on serious take off. BTW, Lynx Engineering in Sydney Australia used to do a manifold for Webers, but only for the 3.8
@escalier-suspenduscale-aut24684 жыл бұрын
hello, I have a complete 3.4 engine which comes from a xk 150 of 1958 with carburetor, gearbox, dinamo starter, it does not work, but it is not broken; do you have a proposal for an exchange with a 4.2 jaguar engine in very good condition, with the adaptation system for the xk 150 chassis, I would be happy to exchange these 2 engines if you give me the metal parts for adapt the 4.2 engine on the xk 150 chassis best regard olivier
@aorakiboydog6 жыл бұрын
my 4.2 cracked the block between the cylinders seems like the bores were too big for the block, my 3.4 had no problems. People of this guys expertise are rare as rocking horse poo .
@andrew_koala29745 жыл бұрын
What in the world is rocking horse poo? You should know that sugar coating shit does not make it any sweeter. Besides which SHIT is an acronym, and it is unlikely you know the origin of the acronym which became a word. I use it frequently as it is most clever. Had you served in the Military,particularly the Royal NAVY you would know about it. Though I followed my aunt (Mothers Sister) into the RAF. for 4 years before coming to AUSTRALIA, where in 1970 I joined the AUSTRALIAN Military, for 18 years, 2 years of which was on exchange to the USAF. And at least two of my friends (both deceased now are ex-Royal NAVY) HMS Dreadnought and HMS King George V So we call it what it is without sugar coating it. Political correctness is a load of SHIT. So get the point. And besides that I attended College at age 14 in Leicester City to learn Mechanics. Fortunately for myself and others, Jaguar were donating Coventry Climax racing engines and other Jaguar engines for the Mechanics students to learn from. Coventry is only some 35 minutes south of Leicester City. And on one occasion students were invited to the Factory, Thankfully we did not have to go through Coventry naked on a white horse. I will always be grateful to the late Sir Donald Stokes / Lord Stokes for making those valuable donations. It was a dream come true, Learning to fly at age 13, qualifying for a PPL just before reaching age 16 and working on Jaguar engines. Yet I never owned a Jaguar. My dad and the husband of a cousin did. Those being 3'8 MKII Having been taken on a fast ride [ The clock hit 95 MPH very quickly)] in a Police 3.8 MK ll whose son was also taking flying lessons I expect that IO had some influence in my dads decision to buy a Jag and not a Mercedes Benz, after he sold his Ford Zodiac, which was a nice two tone Blue and Gray color. Probably being driven to school in a Jag made me feel Elitist. Then again it was a Private School and quite expensive. Thanks Mom and dad for your hard work and effort in educating your 3 children. May you rest in peace, and may Allah forgive you for your misdeeds in life. ( I have to use the correct aramaic/arabic name) not the fake Yiddish derivative. dog spelled in reverse
@wilbertbenjamin6 жыл бұрын
WHATS THAT LOUD TICKING SOUND AT IDLE?
@scottgibson75345 жыл бұрын
Fuel pump.
@altaylor39884 жыл бұрын
You beat me to that observation .... Some would either not hear it or just ignore ... But after a professional rebuild?
@MrKevonski5 жыл бұрын
I think the tappets sound out a bit.
@062241kdp3 жыл бұрын
Is that clicking while the engine is running normal?
@gordonmusic16313 жыл бұрын
Just going to use starter fluid to start mine
@Injudiciously5 жыл бұрын
There appears to be 6 missing pistons.
@tobyw95735 жыл бұрын
A loose tappet guide can cause a tapping sound.
@nkelly.99 ай бұрын
Sounds like one tappet is not quite right.
@doctoredable5 жыл бұрын
Sad when someone claims to know what they are doing and obviously does not. . Many people regret having an engine rebuilt by such charlatans.
@gjmob6 жыл бұрын
Every Jaguar XK6 engine on youtube sounds like that. Camera's pick up the tappet noise and people aren't used to hearing engines without hla's.
@andrew_koala29745 жыл бұрын
It's actually 'A microphone' that picks up the noise. A Microphone is an acoustic device. A Camera is a video device. It can see but cannot hear anything. As an Electronics and Electro-Mechanical engineer I can detect what is technical BS.presented by non technical guessers presenting flawed and inaccurate information.
@thecamperDK5 жыл бұрын
@@andrew_koala2974 You must be fun at parties
@sosco225 жыл бұрын
What is the click?
@fabslyrics5 жыл бұрын
top job
@Jack-qn4vt5 жыл бұрын
Engine sounds fine
@cocodog855 жыл бұрын
that engine sounds just awful...what's making the clicking noise?
@justso18235 жыл бұрын
I must note that if I ever need to stick my tappets down in the future use a spot of silicone pure automotive fuc#ery
@paulrobertson36855 жыл бұрын
bit tappetty?
@graemewilliams13085 жыл бұрын
I have a 64 S Type 3.8. I had coolant in the rear two cylinders. I bet nobody can tell me what caused it.
@michaelpercival79814 жыл бұрын
Your On. ...? Adelaide South Australia ... 011 618 0435 625085 Drop the 0 in front of the 4 outside OZ
@johnbutler31414 жыл бұрын
You left in the rain with the spark plugs out. Please tell.
@toddhazell9255 жыл бұрын
That looks like the engine rebuilt on another KZbin channel by Richard
@jon8xty15 жыл бұрын
Seems to be a tappet clicking!
@paulbakovic74755 жыл бұрын
What the F#!/=^!!!!!!! Who did that??? No business touching a car! Let alone a jag engine!!!!!
@bertmurphy80966 жыл бұрын
Name and Shame
@ColinMill16 жыл бұрын
The Ferret Scout car had the Rolls Royce B60 engine.
@zacharysaul74104 жыл бұрын
can anyone tell me what are the most common problems on a 1971 5.3 L V12 E type
@johnbutler31414 жыл бұрын
rear main oil leaks. Ignition faults.
@jarnosaarinen45832 жыл бұрын
Little bit of a ticking noice?
@rudybishop90895 жыл бұрын
ahh lovely sounds
@Schlipperschlopper3 жыл бұрын
Sadly from 2030 on all combustion cars including classics will be banned from public streets in entire EU and Scandinavia :-( In Germany the Green Peoples Party gave order to shorten fuel supply from 2025 on by reducing all conventional fuel stations to only one state operated central gas station per city or county. They even discuss to slow out the gas pumps from 20 litre per minute to 2 litre per minute (!) From 2027 on in the EU certain car spare parts will be banned too....as exhaust systems, turbo chargers and even some engine and gearbox oils...California and New York will do the same from 2027 on.... So no investments should be done in oil burning cars any longer....They even created a new kind of crime here, called emissions and smoke crime.
@redreuben52603 жыл бұрын
Surely that’s not right ?
@MickeyMishra3 жыл бұрын
nothing gets my crankshaft harder than a good Machinist ▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀
@mclovin5835 жыл бұрын
She purrs now.
@geoffreystearns16903 жыл бұрын
Shame the audio is undecipherable....
@waynedrummond65835 жыл бұрын
E sarnds a lott like Michaeld Caine Yeah? Not a lotta people know that!
@jaguar420g5 жыл бұрын
that engine was so badly built that we would like to know the engine builder so we can stay clear or are people just going to have to suffer
@redtobertshateshandles4 жыл бұрын
What's that saying. If you want something done properly, do it yourself.
@puddingpimp Жыл бұрын
5:27 Those welds on the exhaust headers tho 🤮
@nigelboycott30008 ай бұрын
The exhaust manifolds are purely for test purposes. I got them at a very good price because the welds are not perfect. They are not supposed to be visually perfect, just functional.
@paulhunter1233 жыл бұрын
you can never trust anyone in the car game - i went for a pair of part worns - 4 days later it was showing signs of leaking air - i went to a diff part worn garage that told me some dodgy people about - then puts 50 psi in my 15 inch rims i mean never trust any mechanic, and always inspect what work they have done
@archygrey90933 жыл бұрын
I worked at a tyre shop, you ain't even supposed to put 50 psi in modern tyres.
@paulhunter1233 жыл бұрын
@@archygrey9093 unless your hiding a slow punture, bought from a dodgy garage elsewhere.
@solarflare10085 жыл бұрын
Are those Webber 45?
@maryguest8045 жыл бұрын
Solar Flare murdervideos
@rong.77683 жыл бұрын
Sorry, what language he speaking?
@redtobertshateshandles4 жыл бұрын
Just a story. Who really knows who butchered that engine??
@Auzziebobz5 жыл бұрын
Short cut rebuild inc.
@gazza1165 жыл бұрын
not well that.
@mikestephen31065 жыл бұрын
very poor audio, barely can understand
@donmoore77855 жыл бұрын
He's English :) My mom hated watching old movies from England on tv - but this gentleman is way easier to understand.
@thomaskosvic6103 Жыл бұрын
Sorry, you need to work on your sound. I can't understand a word. I speak american english
@olafzijnbuis5 жыл бұрын
At 06:26 there is a clear indication of what is wrong. Made in England. That is the problem. Nice engines to make money. I would prefer a Toyota Supra engine. Made in Japan. Runs 200k miles without trouble. I had a Triumph Spitfire and a Stag. Absolute rubbish thrown together by incompetent and dissatisfied bricklayers.
@2Worlds_and_InBetween5 жыл бұрын
40+ years difference
@JohnSmith-lf8ks5 жыл бұрын
Everyone to their own preferences. I have zero interest in any Japan stuff, no matter how superior. An E-type is an E-type is an E-type and nothing comes close to it for me.
@peterowens2903 жыл бұрын
Quick count: nearly two thirds of the enthusiasts viewing (and listening) can hear a ticking which sounds like poor tappet adjustment. For heavens sake explain, otherwise much of your presentation is discredited.
@archygrey90933 жыл бұрын
In the description of the video he explains that the tapping sound is much louder in the video than it is in real life.
@deeremeyer17496 жыл бұрын
Did those failures result from "amateur engine rebuilding" or did they result from a crappy engine design with cylinder liners "cast" into an aluminum block leaking coolant into the crankcase, contaminating the oil and causing the crankshaft/lube system problems that ultimately caused that piston to seize and jerk the sleeve out of the block? And was it shoddy work or a tightass owner that refused to pay for proper repairs and the shop did the best possible job "on a budget"? Jag owners seem to think their cars are extraordinarily valuable but also think they're so damned good they don't have to be "rebuilt" properly. Probably because there's no way TOO rebuild them properly without rebuilding them entirely.
@cstoreyqc6 жыл бұрын
Deeremeyer : I suggest you get a magnet and see whether the block is aluminium or not ! Before criticising the design, you might at least get some elementary facts right
@fredfrenchy6 жыл бұрын
Seems you know everything including what Jaguar Owners are like..KMA
@andrew_koala29745 жыл бұрын
@steve gale Correct Mr. Gale. Oh dear oh DEERMEYER what speculation. One should be thankful that DEERMEYER is not an air-crash investigator who it would appear may be likely to be concocting possible fake incident reports without proper analysis.
@therealsharps6 жыл бұрын
Sounds poorly built.
@seankirby25806 жыл бұрын
Having owned an E-type V12, I find the vehicle horrible, unreliable, thirsty and a waste of money. The weight is all at the front, making the steering too heavy. The lack of weight at the rear produces little traction, skidding, sliding and abysmal handling. The engines are unreliable, the electrics appalling. I can't find anything good to write about JLR products.
@marcryvon5 жыл бұрын
Right. The Jags to have are the 3.8 or 4.2 litres, very reliable IF properly tuned and maintained. Yes, the V12 is very heavy and problems prone.
@fw14215 жыл бұрын
sean kirby I wouldn’t have a V-12 XKE,the 6 is the best balance of power and handling!👍🏻
@andrew_koala29745 жыл бұрын
@Sean kirby Decades ago I did know a fellow who also owned a Jaguar E-Type V12, I recall that his comments were for the most part very much the same as yours, and that the car was failing too often for his liking. It was white and looked the part, and I would imagine it was more for Showin' than Goin'. I don't know what became of it. I suspect he most likely sold it or traded it. The man owned a small fleet of some 15 trucks, so perhaps the car was on a commercial lease.
@marcryvon5 жыл бұрын
@@andrew_koala2974 The huge, hyper heavy V12 lump was a reliability disaster. The straight 6s were a lot better choice. Still using Lucas electricals though.... Eeeeesh !
@paulfitzgerald75134 жыл бұрын
Marc René Yvon No it wasn’t. The peripherals were the problem, along with poor maintenance and I’ll advised wanna be jag mechanics. The engine itself was bullet proof.