My engine block (the lower part) is painted red. I was asked to check with you folks if this is a standard factory thing or if this indicates a rebuild has been done.
Anyone know if they painted engine blocks red at the factory? The car is a 1983 240 Turbo from the US.
As "john" already said, this is absolutely normal. I was once told that exchange engines were painted in blue instead of red, but I don't know whether this is true.
Funny you should mention the red block. My neighbour peeked under the hood when I was doing oils etc. He saw the red block and immediately asked if it was a rebuild. I told him thats the way they come from Volvo and showed him the other two cars engines, both 740's and redblock. Dunno if he's convinced tho. It's a Volvo thing. I've never heard of a rebuild engine being painted red tho, so there you go.
Yeah they've all been red since the B18 aside from the PRV haven't they? I know every cast iron 4 they ever sold in a car was painted reddish orange, that's why these famous engines are often called redblocks.
On that note, does anyone have a good match for the original red? I've got a rebuild in progress and would like to repaint the block something close to the original color.
The later-model B280 engines didn't have as many problems as the original B28 engines did. But you're right, the PRV engines are not as reliable as the red-blocks are.
The French must have olympic articulated arm. Have you ever tried to remove a (square) air inlet manifold of a B27E. One nut is almost unpossible to reach. Fortunately the bottom part of the block is more reliable.
From a point at sea, to the circles of your mind, this is Martijn:
I used to have a 240 with the B27E engine. Actually I liked the engine, it semed well suited to the car, and I got it up to a fairly high milage without any of the more commonly reported problems. But it seems that few share this view. And it returned abysmal MPG.
The only lasting trouble I had with it was, indeed, with that big square inlet manifold. My memory of it is that the bolts that held it down were stupidly short, stupidly small and stupidly too few (four bolts for a six port manifold is patently poor design). It was impossible to clamp the manifold to the block and make all six ports airtight without stressing and eventually stripping the threads.
In the end I dispensed with the bolts and made a couple of clamp plates that went across the top of the manifold, tied down to the block with long J-bolts. Didn't look pretty, but did the job.
Thanks for letting me know. I noticed the oilpan was red the first time I went for an oil change but never put it together that the whole block would be red.
One more question answered!
Thanks again, blurp
On Mon, 27 Oct 2003 05:05:45 -0500, the illustrious "Michael Cerkowski albany.net"> favored us with the following prose:
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